I am a physics undergraduate. I am working in the world of textbook (non-relativistic) Quantum Mechanics. Say we have a wave function $\Psi(x,t)$. Must $\Psi(x,t)$ be square-integrable or normalizable?
To my understanding, normalizable implies square-integrable. However, square-integrable does not imply normalizable. For example, $f(x,t) = 0$ is square-integrable, but it is not normalizable.
This leads me to think that a wave function $\Psi(x,t)$ must be normalizable, a stricter requirement than just square-integrable. In particular, $f(x,t) = 0$ is not a wave function and thus cannot represent a physical state.
And, as an application of this tentative result, could one explain why particle annihilation is not built into (non-relativistic) textbook Quantum Mechanics by appealing to the fact that the evolution of a wave function $\Psi(x,t)$ into the wavefunction $f(x,t) = 0$ (after some time has elapsed) is not possible since $0$ itself is not a wave function?