Imagine a piano where each key is a particle’s position. The wave function is the sheet music, and the Schrödinger equation tells how the melody plays and changes over time. Louder notes mean higher probability, and pitch reflects energy. The potential energy acts like a tuning knob, shifting the notes.
This equation lets us predict outcomes in quantum systems, but only probabilistically. We can’t know exact values, and measuring the system changes it (wave function collapse).
Discovered by Erwin Schrödinger in 1926, it’s a core equation describing how quantum states evolve in space and time.