Title: Matter Waves and the Uncertainty Principle _________________________
1Matter Waves and the Uncertainty
Principle_________________________
- Anu Venugopalan
- Centre for Philosophy and Foundations of Science
- New Delhi
2The Birth of Quantum Mechanics___________________
________
- At the turn of the last century, there were
several experimental observations which could not
be explained by the established laws of classical
physics and called for a radically different way
of thinking - This led to the development of Quantum Mechanics
which is today regarded as the fundamental theory
of Nature.
3Some key events/observations that led to the
development of quantum mechanics________________
_________________
- Black body radiation spectrum (Planck, 1901)
- Photoelectric effect (Einstein, 1905)
- Model of the atom (Rutherford, 1911)
- Quantum Theory of Spectra (Bohr, 1913)
4Some key events/observations that led to the
development of quantum mechanics________________
_________________
- Scattering of photons off electrons (Compton,
1922) - Exclusion Principle (Pauli, 1922)
- Matter Waves (de Broglie 1925)
- Experimental test of matter waves (Davisson and
Germer, 1927)
5Rutherford
Planck
Einstein
Bohr
Compton
6Pauli
de Broglie
Davisson and Germer
7The nature of light.___________________________
_
- The birth of quantum mechanics is intimately
linked with the theories and discoveries relating
to the nature of light - Is the nature of light that of a wave or a
particle???
8The story of light..__________________________
_____
- Corpuscular theory (Newton)
- Wave nature (Huygens)
- Double-slit interference experiment (Young)
9The story of light (contd.).._________________
______________
- Light is an electromagnetic wave (Maxwell)
- Photoelectric effect existence of light quanta
photons (Einstein) - Photons have momentum (Compton)..
10Newton
Huygens
Young
Compton
Maxwell
Einstein
11Light has a dual nature__________________________
_
- Wave (electromagnetic) - Interference
- -
Diffraction -
- Particle (photons) - Photoelectric effect
- - Compton effect
- Wave - Particle Duality for light
12What about Matter?______________________________
_
-
-
- If light, which was traditionally understood
as a wave also turns out to have a particle
nature, might matter, which is traditionally
understood as particles, also have a wave nature? - Yes!
13Louis de Broglies hypothesis__________________
__________
- The dual nature of matter
-
- A particle with momentum p has a matter wave
associated with it, whose wavelength is given by -
14The connecting link Plancks
constant_______________________________
- Dual Nature
- Radiation
-
- Matter
15Why isnt the wave nature of matter more
apparent to us?_________________________________
__
-
-
- Plancks constant is so small that we dont
observe the wave behaviour of ordinary objects
their de Broglie wavelengths could be many orders
of magnitude smaller than the size of a nucleus!
16Particle______________________________
- Our traditional understanding of a particle
- Localized - definite position, momentum,
confined in space
17Wave____________________________
-
- Our traditional understanding of a wave.
-
- de-localized spread out in space and time
18How do we associate a wave nature to a
particle?___________________________________
-
- What could represent both wave and particle?
-
- Find a description of a particle which is
consistent with our notion of both particles and
waves -
- Fits the wave description
- Localized in space
19____________________________________
How do you construct a wave packet?
20What happens when you add up waves?_____________
___________________
The Superposition principle
21Adding up waves of different frequencies.._____
_______________________________
22Constructing a wave packet by adding up several
waves ___________________________________
If several waves of different wavelengths
(frequencies) and phases are superposed together,
one would get a resultant which is a localized
wave packet
23A wave packet describes a particle_______________
_____________
- A wave packet is a group of waves with slightly
different wavelengths interfering with one
another in a way that the amplitude of the group
(envelope) is non-zero only in the neighbourhood
of the particle - A wave packet is localized a good
representation for a particle!
24 Wave packet, phase velocity and group velocity
____________________________
- The spread of wave packet in wavelength depends
on the required degree of localization in space
the central wavelength is given by - What is the velocity of the wave packet?
25 Wave packet, phase velocity and group velocity
________________________________
- The velocities of the individual waves which
superpose to produce the wave packet representing
the particle are different - the wave packet as a
whole has a different velocity from the waves
that comprise it - Phase velocity The rate at which the phase of
the wave propagates in space - Group velocity The rate at which the envelope
of the wave packet propagates
26 Wave packet, phase velocity and group velocity
________________________________
- Phase velocity
- Group velocity
- Here is the velocity of light and
is the velocity of the particle
27Heisenberg's Uncertainty Principle_____________
______________________
- The Uncertainty Principle is an important
consequence of the wave-particle duality of
matter and radiation and is inherent to the
quantum description of nature - Simply stated, it is impossible to know both the
exact position and the exact momentum of an
object simultaneously - A fact of Nature!
28Heisenberg's Uncertainty Principle______________
____________________
- Uncertainty in Position
- Uncertainty in Momentum
-
-
29Heisenberg's Uncertainty Principle - applies
to all conjugate variables_____________________
______________
- Position momentum
- Energy time
-
-
30Uncertainty Principle and the Wave
Packet___________________________________
If is large, is small
31 Some consequences of the Uncertainty
Principle ___________________________________
- The path of a particle (trajectory) is not
well-defined in quantum mechanics - Electrons cannot exist inside a nucleus
- Atomic oscillators possess a certain amount of
energy known as the zero-point energy, even at
absolute zero.
32Why isnt the uncertainty principle apparent to
us in our ordinary experience? Plancks
constant, again!! ________________________________
___
-
-
- Plancks constant is so small that the
uncertainties implied by the principle are also
too small to be observed. They are only
significant in the domain of microscopic systems
33Summary___________________________________
- Matter and radiation have a dual nature of both
wave and particle - The matter wave associated with a particle has a
de Broglie wavelength given by
34Summary (contd.)________________________________
___
- A (localized) particle can be represented by a
group of waves called a wave packet - The group velocity of the wave packet is
- The phase velocity of the wave packet is
35Summary (contd.)_______________________________
____
- Heisenbergs uncertainty principle is an
important consequence of the wave-particle
duality of matter and radiation and is inherent
to the quantum description of nature - It applies to all conjugate variables and also to
the notion of the wave packet
36Are matter waves for real?! ____________________
______________
- In 1927 Davisson and Germer showed that electrons
can diffract they act like waves - Big application Electron Microscopes
37(No Transcript)
38Are matter waves for real?! ____________________
______________
- Double slit experiment with electrons (1989)
- (www.hqrd.hitachi.co.jp/em/doubleslit.cfm)
39Are matter waves for real?! ____________________
______________
- Today, advances in technology have led to matter
wave interference experiments being demonstrated
successfully not only with electrons but
neutrons, atoms, and big and small molecules! - Infact, the largest molecule showing
interference has almost a 100 atoms!
40Are matter waves for real?! ____________________
______________
- C60 molecules (Fullerenes or Bucky Balls) have a
wave nature! (A. Zeilinger et al, Vienna, 1999) - Biomolecules have it too!
- Porphyrin
- (2003)
41Are matter waves for real?! ____________________
______________
- What next? Matter wave interference for a
Virus?!
42Matter waves are real. ________________________
_______
- If there is wave, there must be a wave
equation - The Schrödinger Equation