Title: Lecture 12: Waves versus particles
1Lecture 12 Waves versus particles
2Corpuscular Theory of Light (1704)
- Isaac Newton proposed that light consists of a
stream of small particles, because it - travels in straight lines at great speeds
- is reflected from mirrors in a predictable way
Newton observed that the reflection of light from
a mirror resembles the rebound of a steel ball
from a steel plate
3Wave Theory of Light (1802)
- Thomas Young showed that light is a wave, because
it - undergoes diffraction and interference (Youngs
double-slit experiment)
Thomas Young (1773-1829)
4Particles
- Position x
- Mass m
- Momentum p mv
5Waves
- Wavelength l
- Amplitude A
- Frequency f
- number of cycles per second (Hertz)
f c / l
6Waves versus Particles
- A particle is localised in space, and has
discrete physical properties such as mass - A wave is inherently spread out over many
wave-lengths in space, and could have amplitudes
in a continuous range - Waves superpose and pass through each other,
while particles collide and bounce off each other
7Diffraction
8Interference
applet
9Interference Fringes on a Screen
applet
10Blackbody Radiation
- A blackbody is an object which totally absorbs
all radiation that falls on it - Any hot body (blackbodies included) radiates
light over the whole spectrum of frequencies - The spectrum depends on both frequency and
temperature
11Spectrum of Blackbody Radiation
Plot of intensity of the blackbody radiation
versus wavelength for various temperatures
applet
12Ultraviolet Catastrophe
Classical theory predicts a graph that deviates
from experimental data, especially at short
wavelengths
13Plancks Quantum Postulate (1900)
- A blackbody can only emit radiation indiscrete
packets or quanta, i.e., in multiples of the
minimum energy E
hfwhere h is a constant and f is the frequency
of the radiation
Max Planck (1858-1947) is generally regarded as
the father of quantum theory
14Plancks Quantum Postulate (contd)
- Thus, it is harder for a blackbody to emit
radiation at short wavelengths (high frequency)
- since higher energies are required to produce
each quanta of radiation, by Plancks formula - This explains the origin of the ultraviolet
catastrophe
15Plancks Constant
- Experimentally determined to be
h 6.63 x 10-34 Joule sec(Joule kg m2 /
sec2) - A new constant of nature, which turns out to be
of fundamental importance in the new quantum
theory
16Photoelectric Effect
When blue light is shone on the emitter plate,a
current flows in the circuit
17Photoelectric Effect (contd)
But for red light, no current flows in the circuit
video clip
18Experimental Observations
- Only light with a frequency greater than a
certain threshold will produce a current - Current begins almost instantaneously, even for
light of very low intensity - Current is proportional to the intensity of the
incident light
19Problems with Wave Theory of Light
- The wave theory of light is unable to explain
these observations - For waves, energy depends on amplitude and not
frequency - This implies that a current should be produced
when say, high-intensity red light is used
20Einsteins Explanation (1905)
- Light consists of particles, now known as
photons - A photon hitting the emitter plate will eject an
electronif it has enough energy - Each photon has energy E
hf(same as Plancks formula)
Albert Einstein won a Nobel Prize for his work
on the photoelectric effect and not his theory
of relativity!
21Everyday Evidence for Photons
- Red light is used in photographic darkrooms
because it is not energetic enough to break the
halogen-silver bond in black and white films - Ultraviolet light causes sunburn but visible
light does not because UV photons are more
energetic - Our eyes detect colour because photons of
different energies trigger different chemical
reactions in retina cells
22Double-Slit Experimentto illustrate wave nature
of light
23Double-Slit Experiment with a machine gun!
24Double-Slit Experiment with electron gun
Electrons behave like waves!
25Interference Pattern of Electrons
- Determines the probability of an electron
arriving at acertain spot on the screen - After many electrons, resembles the
inter-ference pattern of light
applet
Electron interference pattern after (a) 8
electrons, (b) 270 electrons, (c) 2000electrons,
and (d) 6000 electrons
26Double-Slit Experiment with electron gun and
detector
Trying to detect which slit the electrons pass
through causes them to behave like particles
27Summary
- Waves and particles exhibit very different
behaviour - Yet, light sometimes behaves like particles
- spectrum of blackbody radiation
- photoelectric effect
- And electrons sometimes behave like waves
- interference pattern of electrons
- In quantum theory, the distinction between waves
and particles is blurred