Documente Academic
Documente Profesional
Documente Cultură
x1>x2>x3
v v v x
0 x1 x2 x3
At some At some even
later time later time
Show that the group velocity vg is equal to the physical speed of the particle. Show that
the phase velocity is NOT the speed of the particle. Use the Einsteins relationship
E = ~ and the classical energy E = p2 /2m which is relevant for a slow particle.
2. Now use the relativistic expression for energy E = (m0 c2 )2 + (pc)2 to calculate the
phase velocity and group velocity.
3. (a) Use the uncertainty principle to estimate the kinetic energy of an electron conned
within a given radius r in a hydrogen atom. Assume that p p and r r.
(b) Hence estimate the size of the hydrogen atom in its ground state by minimizing
it total energy as a function of the orbital radius of the electron.
(c) Compare the size obtained in this way with the value obtained from a Bohr theory
calculation.
4. When atoms are subjected to a high enough pressure they become ionized. This will
happen, for example, at the center of a suciently massive gravitating body.
This turns out to be of the order of the mass of Jupiter. Thus, Jupiter is not only the
largest planet composed of hydrogen in the solar system but anywhere in the universe!
(x) = Aeax .
2
(b) Were it moving at this speed, how long would it take to travel 1 m?
(d) What is a reasonable wavelength of the grain of sand and will it behave as a wave
or as a particle?
(e) What is the minimum uncertainty in its velocity if h = 6.67 1010 Js instead of
6.67 1034 Js.
(a) Assume that an orbiting electron wave has the same energy an orbiting particle
would have if at radius r and of momentum mv. Write an expression for this energy.
(b) If the electron behaves as a classical particle, it must obey F = ma. Assuming
circular orbit, apply F = ma to eliminate v in favor of r in the energy expression.
(c) Suppose instead that the electron is an orbiting wave, and that the product of the
uncertainties in radius r and momentum p is governed by an uncertainty relation of
the form pr ~. Also assume that a typical radius of this orbiting wave is roughly
equal to the uncertainty r, and that a typical magnitude of the momentum is roughly
equal to the uncertainty p, so that the uncertainty relation becomes pr ~. Use
this to eliminate v in favor of r in the energy expression.
(d) Sketch on the same graph the expressions from parts (b) and (c).
(e) Find the minimum possible energy for the orbiting electron wave, and the value of
r to which it corresponds.
I l
Z +ve
d Z=0
0 Z
Z -ve
V + Viewing
screen
(a) Experimental arrangement (b) Pattern seen on screen (c) Profile of the pattern
(b) In this state, what is the probability that the electron would be found within 10
cm of the left-hand wall?
(c) If the electron instead has an energy of 1.0 eV, what is the probability that it
would be found within 10 cm of the left-hand wall?
(d) For the 1-eV electron, what is the distance between nodes and the minimum
possible fractional decrease in energy?
12. A 50 eV electron is trapped in a nite well. How far (in eV) is it from being free
if the penetration length of its wave function into the classically forbidden region is 1
nm?
13. Consider a particle that is bound inside an innite well whose oor is sloping as
shown.
U(x) oo U(x) oo
E1
x=L
E2
x= 0
Sketch a plausible wave function when the energy is E1 and when the energy is E2 .
(a) What is the most probable position of the particle after a measurement has been
made?
15. The nuclear potential that binds protons and neutrons in the nucleus of an atom
is often approximated by a square well. Imagine a proton conned in an innite
square well of length 105 nm, a typical nuclear diameter. Calculate the wavelength
and energy associated with the photon that is emitted when the proton undergoes a
transition from the rst excited state (n = 2) to the ground state (n = 1). In what
region of the electromagnetic spectrum does this wavelength belong?
16. Consider the potential energy barrier of length L and height V0 as shown below. An
electron is injected from the left. It has energy E < V0 .
II
I Vo III
E
Electron V(x)
x=0 x=L
Fig. (a)
(a) Write down the wavefunctions in regions I, II and III. These wavefunctions should
include physically plausible terms. The Schrodinger equation (space part) is,
~2 d2 (x)
+ V (x)(x) = E(x).
2m dx2
(c) If a single electron is injected, will it be reected from the wall at x = 0? Can it
penetrate through the obstacle and be found at x > L?
(d) Can the electron be reallyI mean physically be found inside the region II? Use
the uncertainty principle to answer this question.
(e) Find the probability T that the incident electron from the far left is transmitted
into region III.
(f) Now consider the Fig.(b) with, E < V0 , E > W0 , and V0 > W0 .
II
I III
E
Vo
Wo
x=0 x=L
Fig. (b)
Using your result for part (e), nd the transmission probability into region III.
(g) If the barrier in gure (a) is to act like a 50:50 beamsplitter, what are the required
conditions on E, V0 and L?
17. The gure shows the potential energy landscape and the dashed line shows the energy
of an electron trapped inside the innite well.
V oo V oo
(d) (e)
18.
E
II Vo
I
Vo
A particle (photon) is injected from the left into the region I, it encounters a potential
step of height V0 and enters region II. The energy of the photon is 2V0 . What can you
say about the ratio of the propagation speeds of the photon in regions I and II, vI and
vII ?
(a) vI = vII .
19. A free electron of energy E has a de Broglie wavelength = h/p = h/ 2mE and
speed v. In the presence of an electric eld, it acquires a potential energy eu(x),
where u(x) is the potential. Hence the total energy changes, and the speed of the
electron changes to v . What is the value of refractive index n = v
v
?
(a) 1 (one).
(b) E/u(x).
(c) E/(E eu(x)).
(d) (E eu(x))/E.
(e) eu(x)/E.
20. A particle is described by the wavefunction (x, t) = ei(kxt) and can be thought
of a plane wave traveling along the x axis. The real part at t = 0 is shown in the
accompanying diagram. (The wavefunction extends from to which of course we
cannot show on paper.) Which of the following statements most accurately describes
the probability of nding the particle.
Re [(x,t= 0)]
(c) It is most likely to be found in the peaks or the troughs the wave.
Vo
~ 2 2
The energy values are approximately the same as the innite well, E = n2 2mL 2. A
laser photon of energy Ephoton shines on the quantum dot in the ground state. What
should be the minimum diameter if the electron is to always remain conned in the
quantum dot?
22. The position wavefunction, (x) of a particle at some instant is given by,
1
(x) = ,
L2 + (x xo )2 /2
where L, xo , are constants. Which of the following expressions given below is a good
approximate to the spread in the momentum, p? We are measuring spreads by
FWHM (full width at half maximum), and xp ~. (HINT: The wavefunction is
maximum at x = x0 ) and its prole is shown in the gure.
(x)
A
A/2
xo x
x
(a) p ~/(L)
(b) p ~/
(c) p ~/(2 xo )
(d) p ~/(2 L2 )
(e) p ~/(xo )
23. The energy landscape for electrons in a metal is shown below in Fig.(a), while Fig.(b)
shows the physical conguration.
(a) (b)
EF d
Metal Metal Tip
Vo
Metal Vacuum
The electrons have quantized energies and the most energetic electron is at the energy
EF (called the Fermi energy). Now EF is below the vacuum level by an energy called
the work function.
(a) In eld emission, a large positive voltage V0 is applied to a nearby metal tip as
shown in Fig.(b). Sketch how the energy diagram shown in (a) is modied. How are
electrons ejected from the metal?
(b) Using your sketch of the modied potential energy diagram, nd the minimum
voltage V0 required for the electron to tunnel out into the metal tip kept a distance d
away. The electron does not change its energy in the process.
(c) Assume that the critical distance for the tunneling of this kind is d = 2.5 nm and
the work function is 4 eV. What is the electric eld required for emission?
24. Advance an argument that there is no bound (=quantized) state in a half innite well
(shown in the diagram) unless the potential barrier V0 is at least h2 /(8ma2 ).
oo
Vo
25. The equations for the reection R and transmission T for light encountering a trans-
parent lm are essentially the same as a particle of energy E seeing a potential dis-
continuity while E always remains greater than the potential energy. Derive the value
of the ratio between the wave numbers k1 and k2 if 50% of the light is always reected
at an interface.
26. A metal is held at zero voltage. The energy diagram at the metal-air interface is
shown.
Unfilled levels
EF
Filled levels
Metal Air
In thermionic emission, electrons are ejected from the metal surface because:
(c) The potential energy seen by the electrons in the air slopes downward.
(d) Increasing temperature makes more electrons jump into unlled levels increasing
the fraction of electrons with thermal energy beyond .
27.
n (quantum number)
10
i 9
8
EF 7
6
5 e2 /2Cdot
4
3
2
1
The gure shows the energy diagram for a metal in which electrons ll energy levels
upto EF . A thin insulating oxide layer separates the metal from a quantum dot with
only ten quantized energy levels. The quantum dot is given a positive potential V0
with respect to the metal, enabling an electron to tunnel across the oxide layer. Which
one of these plots shows the correct behavior of the tunneling current i from metal to
the quantum dot. At V0 = 0, EF is at the same energy as the n = 7 quantum level.
Vo Vo Vo
e /2Cdot
i (d) i (e)
e /2Cdot e /2Cdot
Vo Vo
28. An electron is injected into a potential energy landscape from the left region I as shown
below. It encounters a potential step. The energy of the electron is E and E < |V0 |.
If the electron is to emerge in region III with a faster speed, the appropriate potential
step is given by which of the following?
(a) (b)
II I II III
E
I Vo III
E Vo
(c) (d)
II II
I Vo III I Vo III
E E
29. Snells law of refraction determines the bending of light across an interface. For sure,
electrons are also waves and can be refracted. The corresponding law for electrons is
called Bethes law and is given by,
sin v2
= ,
sin v1
where is the angle of incidence measured from the normal to the interface, is the
angle of refraction also measured from the normal, v1 is the speed of electron in the
incident medium and v2 is the speed in the refracted medium. Now a beam of electrons
is made to pass through two hollow cylinders with an applied voltage dierence. Which
of the following diagrams show the correct trajectory of electrons?
Incident Incident
medium medium
+ + + +
+ + refracted
+ + refracted
+ + + +
+ + medium + + medium
+ + + +
+ + + +
(a) No bending. (b) Bending towards normal.
Incident Incident
medium medium
+ + + +
+ + refracted + +
+ + + + refracted
+ + medium + + medium
+ + + +
+ + + +
(c) Bending away from normal. (d) No refraction takes place.
30. An electron starts o in the region B, trapped in a well. The potential energy V (x)
along position x is shown.
Now suppose some time lapses. From a quantum viewpoint, which of the regions A or
C, is the electron more probable to be found?
(a) Region A.
(b) Region C.
31. A particle moving in a region of zero force encounters a precipicea sudden drop in
the potential energy to an extremely large negative value. What is the probability
that it will go over the edge, i.e., it will enter the negative potential energy region?
32. An electron is trapped inside a three-dimensional quantum dot. The energy is quan-
tized in three dimensions according to,
( )
2 ~2 n2x n2y n2z
Enx ,ny ,nz = + 2 + 2 ,
2m a2 b c
where a, b and c are the conning dimensions of the box(= dot) and nx , ny , nz are
the three quantum numbers, each one of them being a positive integer.
''
`Quantum Dot''
b
c
a
If a = b = c, the energy dierence between the ground and the rst excited state is,
2 ~2 ~2 2
(a) 2ma2
. (b) 9 2ma 2.
~2 2 2 ~2
(c) 3 2ma 2. (d) ma2
.
(e) There are more than one rst excited states all with dierent energies. Hence
this question cannot be answered.
11 x2.11013 t)
(x, t) = Aei(2.510 ,
34. An electron of energy 1 eV is trapped inside an innite well of length 30 cm. What is
the distance between two consecutive nodes of the electrons wavefunction? (A node
is a point where the wavefunction goes to zero.)
(d) 6 1010 m.
35. An electron is trapped in an innite well of length L and ground state energy E1 . At
t = 0, the wavefunction is,
1 ( )
(x, 0) = 1 (x) + 22 (x) ,
5L
where 1 (x) and 2 (x) are normalized wavefunctions in the ground and rst excited
states. The wavefunction at t = ~/E1 is given by:
(a) (b)
Re () Re ()
1
2
-1
(d)
(c) Re ()
Re ()
1
2
0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0 x/L
1
-1
-1
Re () (e)
4
to oo
to oo
energy E
x
a b
A particle of energy E exists inside this region. A sketch of the possible (real part) of
the wavefunction is;
(a) (b)
wavefunction is
wavefunction
non zero at x > b
is zero at x > b
x x
a b a b
(d)
(c)
wavefunction wavefunction
is zero at x > b is zero at x > b
x
x a b
a b
37. Suppose a particle is in the ground state with wavefunction 1 (x). Which one of the
following is the probability that the particle will be found in a narrow range between
x and x + dx.
38. A free particle has a wavefunction A(eikx + eikx ) and energy E. A is a normalization
constant. Mark True of False against these statements.
(iii) The de Broglie wave associated with the particle is in fact a standing wave.
39. The uncertainty relationship for a particle moving in a straight line is px ~/2.
R
R = radius
S = Arc length
If the particle is moving in a circle with angular momentum L, the uncertainty rela-
tionship becomes:
(a) L ~2 .
(b) LS ~2 .
(c) LR ~2 .
(d) L ~2 .
40. In a scanning tunneling microscope (STM), the tunneling probability of electrons from
metal surface to a prob tip is proportional to exp(2L), where L is the tip-sample
distance and = 1 nm1 is the inverse of the penetration length.
Tip
Tip
L L -L
Metal surface Metal surface
If the tip moves closer to the surface by L = 0.1 nm, the tunneling current,
(b) increase by 22 %.
(c) decrease by 22 %.
(d) increase by 10 %.
(e) decrease by 10 %.
41. The Heisenberg uncertainty principle applies to photons as well as to material particles.
Thus a photon conned to a small box of size x necessarily has a large uncertainty
in momentum and uncertainty in energy. Recall that for a photon E = pc.
(a) Estimate the uncertainty in energy for a photon conned to the tiny box of size
x.
(c) This mass can be extremely large, if x is tiny. If x is suciently small, the large
mass can create a large gravitational eld, suciently large to form a black hole. When
this happens x is called the Planck length, and this is when gravity and quantum
mechanics become inter mixed. For a black hole, not even light can escape.
Launch an object
(d) If vesc = c, nothing can escape from this star, not even light. If we were to replace
the star of mass M with a photon of the mass calculated in part (b), and conned to
length x, and set R = x, calculate the Planck length in terms of G, ~ and c.
42. The radioactive decay of certain heavy nuclei by emission of an alpha particle is a result
of quantum tunneling. Imagine an alpha particle moving around inside a nucleus,
such as thorium (mass number= 232). When the alpha particles bounces against the
surface of the nucleus, it meets a barrier caused by the attractive nuclear force. The
dimensions of barrier vary a lot from one nucleus to another, but as representative
numbers you can assume that the barriers width is L 35 fm (1 fm = 1015 m) and
the average barrier height is such that V0 E 5 MeV. Find the probability that an
alpha hitting the nucleus surface will escape. Given that the alpha hits the nuclear
surface about 5 1021 times per second, what is the probability that it will escape in
a day? The tunneling probability is T = e2L where = 2m(V0 E)/~ and L is
the barrier length. (1 MeV= 106 eV).
Solution
Answer 1:
The group velocity is given by,
( )( )
d d dE
vg = = . (1)
dk dE dk
According to Einsteins energy equation,
E = ~. (2)
Answer 2:
For convenience, lets denote vparticle = v. The energy and momentum of a relativistic
particle (in this case, electron) are given by,
mo c 2
E = m c2 = (7)
1 vc2
2
mo v
p = mv =
1 c2
v2
The energy in terms of the relativistic momentum p and the rest mass mo can be obtained
from the expression we have now encountered several times,
E 2 = p2 c2 + m2o c4
E = c p2 + m2o c2 . (8)
The corpuscular features (energy and momentum) of an electron are connected to its wave
characteristics (wave frequency and number ) by the relations,
E = ~ and p = ~ k.
= E
c
mo v c 2
=
E 1 vc2
2
mo v c 2 1 v2
c2
=
1 vc2
2 mo c 2
Hence vg = v.
This shows that the speed of relativistic particle is equal to its group velocity.
Similarly, the phase velocity of relativistic particle can be calculated as
E
vph =
p
c p2 + m2o c2
=
p
m2 c 2
= c 1 + o2
p
m2 c2 v2
= c 1 + 2o 2 (1 2 )
mo v c
c2 v2
= c 1 + 2 (1 2 )
v c
c 2
= c 2
.
( v)
c
Hence vph = c .
v
As c > v, this means vph > c, predicting that the phase velocity for the relativistic particle is
greater than the speed of light c. This appears to be a violation of the postulates of special
theory of relativity. Actually, the phase velocity does not represent the physical velocity of
the particle, rather it is the group velocity which represents the speed of propagation of the
particle. Hence, the result that vg , and not vp , represents particle speeds, holds both in the
relativistic and non-relativistic scenarios.
Answer 3:
(a) It is given that p p and r r. When we consider small radii, the electron is
present very close to the nucleus. Pushing the electron any closer to the nucleus results in
increased energies. The electron may even gain enough energy to y away from the nucleus.
This is when the atom will ionize and hence the useful rule, it is impossible to squish
atoms. Close to the nucleus, we are rubbing shoulders with the uncertainty principle.
According to this principle, the momentum of an electron conned within a given radius
r is approximately given by p ~/r. (One could also use p ~/(2r) without aecting the
overall implications of the result. Remember that the uncertainty principle is an inequality!)
Therefore, when conned to a radius r, the kinetic energy will be of the order,
p2 ~2
K.E = = .
2m 2mr2
Attempting to bring the nucleus any closer to the nucleus may result in extremely large
kinetic energies, shooting the electron away.
(b) In the closest approach of the electron to the nucleus, the total energy of the hydrogen
atom is,
10
r min
Radius
-10
E min
This is the radius, rmin , when the energy is minimum. The nucleus attracts the electron,
so the electron prefers to exist close to the nucleus, but at the same time, the uncertainty
principle does not let it come too close!
(c) The value of the radius calculated above is in excellent agreement with the radius of the
smallest orbit (n = 1) calculated from Bohrs model.
Answer 4:
(a) Using the information provided in Question 1: p p and r r , and using the un-
certainty principle, the momentum of an electron conned within a radius r is approximately
p ~/r. The total energy is,
(c)
R
Pion
We assume a spherical planet of radius R and mass M . We determine the parameters that
result in ionizing pressures at the centre of the planet. First of all, we assume a constant
density of the planet throughout the interior. An estimate of the density is the proton
mass divided by the volume of the atom,
mp
= 4 3
= 2.8 104 kg m3 . (10)
3
rion
The pressure exerted by a uid of length R at its base is given by gR. However, the
value of g on this planet is unknown, but from Newtons law of gravitation, we know that
g = GM/R2 . Therefore,
GM
Pion = g R = (11)
R
GM
R= = 3.5 1020 M m. (12)
Pion
Now the density can also be equated to the mass of the planet divided by its volume,
M
= 2.8 104 kg m3 = 4 (13)
3
R3
4
M = R3 . (14)
3
Inserting the value of M into (12) and then back substituting results in,
M = 4 1026 kg,
R = 1.6 107 m.
The measured mass and radius of Jupiter are 1.9 1027 kg and 7 107 m (values taken from
Wikipedia).
Answer 8:
We are given that,
~
x p
2
~ 1.05 1034
p =
2x 2 550 109 m
= 9.65 1029 kgms1 .
p = mv
p
v =
m
9.7 1029 kg m s1
=
106 kg
= 9.65 1023 m s1 .
For macroscopic particle v ~/2(x)m is small because of the very small ~/m ratio. v
becomes signicant only if ~ were large or the mass m decreases. Small ~ and large m makes
the macroscopic classic world undisturbed by quantum uncertainties!
(b)
1 m 106
t = s = 0.1 1017 s 3 billion years!
v 9.65 1023
The uncertainty in velocity is really really small! An observer would require 3 billion years
to notice the grain of sand, supposedly at rest, at a position 1 m away from its original
position. The current age of the solar system is approximately 5 billion years.
(c) Yes uncertainties are extremely small. No device has ever been built, and may never be
built that can measure these small velocities. We can safely apply classical mechanics to a
grain of sand; there is eectively no uncertainty in position or in momentum. Furthermore,
a precision as ne as 1022 m/s is never required in classical mechanics.
(d)
h h
= = .
mv p
Now what momentum should I choose? The uncertainty principle dictates a p 9.71029
kg m s1 . The momentum could therefore have any value between, approximately p/2
and p/2. Lets choose an extreme value, p p/2 5 1029 kg m s1 . Therefore,
6.67 1034
1.3 105 m.
5 1029
This is such a small wavelength compared to apparatus we might use for macroscopic objects,
that for all practical purposes, the grain of sand acts like a particle!
(e) v would be 9.65 10 96 m/s, if h were this large. This is a huge uncertainty. We
are saved by the exceedingly small value of h
Answer 9:
(a) Total energy of an orbiting particle in terms of its kinetic energy and electrostatic
potential energy is give by,
(b) Since electron is orbiting in a circular orbit, its centripetal acceleration in its orbit is
(v 2 /r), while electrostatic force on the electron is (ke2 /r2 ), thus,
F = ma
( 2)
ke2 v
2
= m
r r
2
ke
v2 =
mr
2 e2
v = .
40 mr
The negative electrostatic potential energy is always of greater magnitude than the positive
kinetic energy, so the total energy strictly decreases as r decreases. Hence there is no
minimum energy. In the accompanying gure, course A corresponds to the energy of the
classical particle, whose energy decreases as r.
(c) Now assuming pr = ~, we have p = ~/r or v = ~/mr. Therefor equation (42) becomes,
( )2
1 ~ e2
Ematter wave = m
2 mr 40 r
~ 2
e 2
= 2
2mr 40 r
In this case as r decreases, and the wave become more compact, the likely speed increases.
The kinetic energy increases faster than the potential decreases, and the total energy at
some point must increase. Hence applying uncertainty principle there is a turning point A
in the curve labelled B.
(d) The two plots are shown in the gure.
E 0.2
(arb. units)
2 4 6 8 10
r
Curve B
-0.2
A
-0.4 Curve A
-0.6
While the energy of a classical particle would monotonically decrease as r decreases, the
energy of the matter wave reaches a minimum, and then increases.
(e) The minimum possible energy for the orbiting electron wave can be calculated by setting
the derivative of energy with respect to r, to zero.
~2 e2
Ematter wave =
2mr2 40 r
dEmatter wave ~2 e2
= 3+ =0
dr mr 40 r2
40 ~2
r =
me2
9 109 Nm2 /C2 (1.055 1034 Js)2
=
9.11 1031 (1.6 1019 C)2
= 5.3 1011 m.
This turns out to be astoundingly close to the Bohr radius calculated earlier in class. In-
serting this value of r and other constants will give energy for matter wave as follows.
The energy happens to equal the correct, experimentally determined value, and the radius
is indeed the most probable radius at which the electron would be found. That these
agree so closely is an accident; many approximations have been made. Nevertheless, the
uncertainty principle does impose a lower limit on the energy, and it is no accident that the
value we obtained is of the correct order of magnitude.
Answer 10:
(a) The electrons have a quantum eld as they are present in the region between the
screens. This eld is a superposition of two elds, 1 and 2 corresponding to two electrons
ejecting from either of the slits. The phase dierence between 1 and 2 results in these
eld interfering causing an interference pattern.
N.B. I dont like the expression wavefunction splitting or electron splitting. Electrons
interfering with themselves is ne.
(b) V is halved, so energy eV = p2 /2m is halved. Hence p2 is halved or p is reduced 2
times. Since p = h/, increases 2 times and k = 2/ decreases 2 times. If the
voltage were V gave a wavenumber k, then a voltage V /2 gives a wavenumber k/ 2. The
interference pattern is proportional to cos2 (kd sin /2). Hence after the halving, the pattern
is proportional to cos2 ((kd sin )/2 2).
Let (kd sin )/2 = . With voltage V , intensity pattern cos2 (). With voltage V /2,
intensity pattern cos2 (/ 2) = cos2 (0.707).
Now a minimum is observed when cos2 () = 0 = /2, when voltage is V . Whereas,
if the voltage is V /2, the minimum appears at cos2 (0.707) = 0 0.707 = /2
= /2 0.707, which is larger than the previous case. Hence the fringe width increases
2 = 1.411 times.
b
Voltage V
0 Z
2b
Voltage V/2
0 Z
(c)
(i) E = p2 /2m = eV , if V is halved E is halved.
(ii) If V is halved p2 is halved, so p is reduced 2 times.
(d) The protons gain the same energy as electrons, because they carry the same charge. But
protons are heavier than electrons, so their momentum is larger (p2 = 2mE), hence is
shorter and k = 2/ is larger. Since energy pattern cos2 ((kd sin )/2), a large k would
result in rapid spatial variation in bright and dark fringes which will therefore be squeezed
close together.
With electrons
With protons
(not to scale)
Answer 11:
(a) For an innite square well, the energy is,
2 ~2 n 2
En =
2mL2
2 ~2
E1 =
2mL2
2 (1.054 1034 J sec)2
=
2(9.1 1031 kg)(0.3 m)2
= 6.71 1037 J.
The probability of nding the electron within 10 cm of the left-hand wall is,
0.1
P (0 < x < 0.1 m) = (x)(x)dx
0 0.1
= |(x)|2 dx
0
2 0.1 2
= sin (x/L)dx
L 0
2 0.1 (1 cos(2x/L))
= dx
L 0 2
1 0.1
= (1 cos(2x/L))dx
L 0
[ ]0.1
1 sin(2x/L)
= 1
L 2/L 0
= 0.21.
2 ~2 n 2
2
= 1.6 1019 J
2mL
2mL2 (1.6 1019 J)
n2 =
2 ~2
2(9.11 1031 kg)(0.3 m)2 (1.6 1019 J)
=
2 (1.054 1034 J sec)2
= 2.38 1017
n = 4.88 108 .
With this energy of electron, the probability of nding it within 10 cm of left-hand wall is,
0.1
P (0 < x < 0.1 m) = (x)(x)dx
0
2 0.1 2
= sin (nx/L)dx
L 0
2 0.1 (1 cos(2nx/L))
= dx
L 0 2
1 0.1
= (1 cos(2nx/L))dx
L 0
[ ]0.1
1 sin(2nx/L)
= 1
L 2n/L 0
= 0.33.
E
Uo
x= 0 x= L
The penetration depth is given by,
~
= = 1 109 m
2m(U0 E)
~2
2m(U0 E) =
(1 109 m)2
~2
U0 E =
2m(1 109 m)2
= 38.2 meV.
Answer 13:
The plausible wavefunctions are shown in the Figure.
U(x) oo U(x) oo
1
E1
node node
2 x=L
E2
Penetration into the
x= 0 classically forbidden
region
Answer 14:
The wavefunction for an innite well is,
( )
2 nx
n (x) = sin
L L
For rst excited state, n = 2,
( )
2 2x
2 (x) = sin
L L
and the probability is,
P2 (x) = |2 (x) 2 (x)|
( )
2 2 2x
= sin
L L
dP2 (x)
The quantity dx
= 0 when x = 0, L/4, L/2, 3L/4, L but when x = 0, L/2, L, the wave-
function 2 (x) = 0.
Thus at x = 0, L/2, L, the probability of nding the particle is zero. The most probable
positions are x = L/4, and x = 3L/4.
(b) The average position is given by the following,
L
x = x 2 (x)2 (x)dx
0
L
= x |2 (x)|2 dx
0
2 L
= x sin2 (2x/L)dx
L 0
L
2
= x (1 cos(4x/L))dx
2L 0
1 L 1 L
= xdx x cos(4x/L)dx
L 0 L 0
L
= 0
2
L
=
2
Answer 15:
In a square well, the energy that corresponds to nth energy level is,
2 ~2 n 2
En =
2mL2
When a proton undergoes a transition from the rst excited state (n = 2) to the ground
state (n = 1), the energy of emitted photon is,
2 ~2 2
E21 = (2 12 )
2mL2
3 2 ~2
=
2mL2
3 2 (1.054 1034 Js)2
=
2(1.67 1027 kg)(1014 m)2
= 9.8 1015 J.
Answer 16:
(a) The time independent Schrodinger equation is,
~2 d2 (x)
+ V (x)(x) = E(x).
2m dx2
For Region I:
For region I the Schrodinger equation, with V = 0, is,
~2 d2 (x)
= E(x)
2m dx2
2
d (x) 2mE
+ 2 (x) = 0
( dx2
2 ~)
d 2mE
+ 2 (x) = 0
dx2 ~
(D2 + k 2 )(x) = 0, (16)
2mE
where k = ~2
.
D2 = k 2
D = ik,
the rst term on the right is a forward propagating wave and the second term is a backward
propagating wave.
For Region II: V = V0 and E < V0
The Schrodinger equation for this region becomes,
~2 d2 (x)
2
+ (V0 E)(x) = 0
( 2m 2 dx2 )
~ d
+ (V0 E) (x) = 0
2m dx2
( 2 )
d 2m
2 (V0 E) (x) = 0
dx2 ~
(D2 2 )(x) = 0
D = ,
2m(V0 E)
where 2 = ~2
, is a positive constant.
Since the exponents are real, II (x) does not represent an oscillatory function, rather it
is a decreasing function.
For Region III: V=0
Since the wavevector of region III is same as that of region I, hence the solution becomes,
Since the wave does not seen any obstacle in region III, it cannot be reected implying
F = 0. The wavefunction therefore, is,
d(x)
(b) The boundary condition at the edges of the barrier are that (x) and dx
must be
continuous at both edges.
At x=0:
I (x = 0) = II (x = 0)
A+B = C +D (18)
dI dII
and =
dx x=0 dx x=0
ikA ikB = C D
ik(A B) = (C D)
A B = i (C D). (19)
k
At x=L:
II (x = L) = III (x = L)
CeL + DeL = EeikL (20)
dII dIII
and =
dx x=L dx x=L
CekL DeL = ikEeikL
k eikL
CeL DeL = i E kL (21)
e
Equations (37), (38), (39) and (40) are the required boundary conditions.
(c) If a single electron is injected with energy less than the barrier height (E < V0 ), classically
the particle cannot penetrate through the barrier, it will be reected completely. However
quantum mechanics tell us that the particle has certain probability to go through the barrier,
and this is when the transmission coecient is non-zero.
(d) In region II the total energy is less than the potential energy, which means that the
particle appears to possess negative kinetic energy here. From equation (17) on page 3, 1/
represents a penetrating length ,
1 ~
= = ,
2m(V0 E)
Prob. that the particle crosses right boundary per unit time
T =
Prob. that the particle crosses left boundary per unit time
|prob/time|x=L
=
|prob/time|x=0
|prob/length length/time|x=L
=
|prob/length length/time|x=0
|(x)|2x=L v
=
|(x)|2x=0 v
|(x)|2x=L
= .
|(x)|2x=0
In the given case, |(x)|2x=L = |E|2 and |(x)|2x=0 = |A|2 . therefore transmission probability
is,
|E|2
T =
|A|2
In order to calculate |E|2 and |A|2 we will use the four boundary conditions derived in part
(b). Add equation (37) and (38),
( ) ( )
2A = C 1 i +D 1+i
k k
( ) ( )
C D
A = 1i + 1+i . (22)
2 k 2 k
Using values of C and D from equations (23) and (24) in equation (41) yields,
( )( )( ) ( )( )( )
1 EeikL k 1 EeikL k
A = 1+i 1i + 1i 1+i
2 2eL k 2 2eL k
[ ( ) ( )]
EeikL L k k
= e 1 + i i + 1 + eL 1 + i i + 1
4 k k
[ ( ) ( )]
Ee ikL
L (k )
2 2
(k 2 )
2
= e 2+i +e L
2i ,
4 k k
Transmissivity
0.8
0.6
0.4
0.2
-18
1 2 3 4 Energy X10 J
I (0) = II (0)
A+B = C +D (27)
and I (0) = II
(0)
A B = i (C D), (28)
k
while the boundary conditions at x = L are,
Inserting values of C and D from equations (32) and (33) into equation (31) results in,
( )( )( ) ( )( )( )
1 EeiL 1 EeiL
A = 1+i 1i + 1i 1+i
2 2eL k 2 2eL k
iL
[ ( ) ( )]
Ee
= eL 1 + i i + + eL 1 + i i +
4 k k k k
[ {( ) ( )} {( ) ( )}]
EeiL L
= e 1+ +i +e L
1+ i
4 k k k k
[ ( ) ( ) ( ) ( )]
EeiL L L L
= e 1+ + ie +e L
1+ ie .
4 k k k k
If we would like to express the nal result explicitly in terms of the energy and length, we
+ ~ ~
2m(V0 E) 2mE
~ ~
[( )2 ( ){( )2
1 E W0 L E W0
= 1+ + sinh 2
2m(V0 E) 1+
4 E ~ E
( )2 }]
E W0 V0 E
+
V0 E E
(g) If the barrier acts like a 50:50 beamsplitter, the transmission probability will be 0.5.
Setting T = 0.5, in the last expression of part (e),
[ ( )]1
V02 2 L
1
1+ sinh 2m(V0 E) =
4E(V0 E) ~ 2
( )
V02 2 L
1+ sinh 2m(V0 E) = 2
4E(V0 E) ~
( )
V02 2 L
sinh 2m(V0 E) = 1
4E(V0 E) ~
( )
4E(V0 E) L
= sinh 2
2m(V0 E)
V02 ~
( )
4E(V0 E) L
= sinh 2m(V0 E)
V0 ~
( )
2 E L
= sinh 2m ,
V0 ~
where = V0 E. The above expression is the required relation between E, V0 and L.
Answer 17:
From the gure we can see that the wavenumber for region 0 x L/2 is,
2mE
k= ,
~
while the wavenumber for region L/2 x L is,
2m(E V0 )
k =
~
Since k < k, > , option (d) is the correct answer. The wavelength is longer in the right
half of the potential well.
Answer 18:
Option (d) is the correct answer. From the gure, we observe that in region I the wavefunc-
tion is,
2mE 2m(2V0 ) 4mV0
kI2 = = = ,
~ 2 ~ 2 ~2
and likewise for region II,
2mE 2m(V0 ) 2mV0
2
kII = = =
~ 2 ~ 2 ~2
Hence,
kI
= 2.
kII
Since k = p/~ = mv/~, we have
vI = 2vII .
Answer 19:
In the absence of electric eld,
h h
= = , and speed is v.
p 2mE
In the presence of electric eld, total energy of the electron changes to (E eu(x)), resulting
in the modied wavelength,
h h
=
= , and the changed speed is v .
p 2m(E eu(x))
Ratio between the momentums and speed is,
p mv v 2mE E
= = = =
p mv v 2m(E eu(x)) (E eu(x))
Answer 20:
The correct option is (a). The probability density (x, t)(x, t) = ei(kxt) ei(kxt)
= 1 is independent of position. So the particle can be found, with equal likelihood,
anywhere along the x axis.
Answer 21:
~
2 2 2 ~2
The energy of electron is n2 2mL 2 and in the ground state E1 = 2mL2
. If a photon shines on
2 ~2
the quantum dot, the electron can be excited to the level, Ephoton + 2mL2
. If the electron is
to remain conned,
2 ~2
Ephoton + < V0
2mL2
2 ~2
< V0 Ephoton
2mL2
2mL2 1
>
~
2 2 V0 Ephoton
2 ~2
L > ,
2m(V0 Ephoton )
which is the minimum diameter that the quantum dot must have.
Answer 22:
We are given that,
1
(x) =
L2 + (x xo )2 /2
At x = x0 ,
1
(x = x0 ) =
L2
1 1
= 2
2L 2 L + (x xo )2 /2
(x xo )2
2L2 = L2 +
2
(x xo )2
L2 =
2
L = (x xo )2
2 2
L = (x xo )
x 2L.
~ ~
p =
x 2L
Since we are talking about estimates, option (a) is the correct answer.
Answer 23:
(a)
Fig.(a) shows the energy landscape before a voltage V0 is applied. If the tip is given a
positive potential, its potential energy, as seen by the electrons decreases. This results in a
downwards bending of the energy prole.
Fig. (c): Tunneling into metal Fig. (d): Tunneling into air
eVo
eVo
EF (bulk) EF (bulk)
EF (tip)
EF (tip)
d
d
Bulk Air Tip Tip
Bulk Air
Now Fig. (c) and (d) show two scenarios; (c) is when V0 is small such that an electron in
the bulk metal can directly tunnel into the metal tip while keeping its energy constant. The
thick arrow shows a tunneling electron. Whereas in (d), the V0 is large, resulting in the
excessive sloping of the potential energy to such a large extent, that EF (bulk) is higher in
energy than EF (tip) + . This would result in the electron being tunneled into air, instead
of the metal.
(b) For tunneling into the metal tip, the required condition is evident from Fig.(c),
We observe that,
Comparing equations (42) and (37), we nd out eV0 < is the condition for tunneling into
the metal tip. Likewise from Fig.(d), it is readily observable that eV0 > is the condition
for tunneling into air.
(c) For tunneling into the metal tip, eV0 < . To nd the threshold voltage we set,
V0 = = 4 V.
e
Hence maximum electric eld ensuring tunneling into the tip is,
V0 4
E = = = 2 109 V/m .
d 2 10 9
Answer 24:
For a half innite well potential, the energy E inside the well is directly proportional to k 2 ,
(E = ~2 k 2 /2m) and the wave number k is k = 2/. Therefore the maximum wavelength
inside the well corresponds to the ground state energy. If the ground state energy is less
than V0 , we will, for sure, have at least one bound state. The maximum possible wavelength
inside the well is simply equal to 2a, such that,
2 2
k= = =
2a a
The energy for this longest wavelength inside the well is,
~2 k 2 ~2 2 h2 2
E = = =
2m 2ma2 8 2 ma2
2
h
=
8ma2
For the existence of bound states it is necessary that V0 > E. It implies that there will be
no bound states if,
h2
V0 < ,
8ma2
which is the required result.
Answer 25:
E>Vo
I II Vo
x=0
2mE
The wavefunctions in region I, I (x) = Aeik1 x + Beik1 x , with k12 = , and
~2
2m(E V0 )
The wavefunctions in region II, II (x) = Ceik2 x , with k22 =
~2
At x = 0,
A+B = C (38)
which are derived from continuity of wavefunction and its derivative at the discontinuity
(x = 0).
From equation (38),
k1
(A B) = C (40)
k2
Comparing equation (38) and (40),
k1
A+B = (A B)
k2
( ) ( )
k1 k1
A 1 = B 1 +
k2 k2
( )
B 1 (k1 /k2 )
=
A 1 + (k1 /k2 )
( )
k2 k1
=
k2 + k1
The reection coecient is given by |B|
2
|A|2
,
( )2 ( )2
|B|2 (k2 k1 ) k2 k1
= =
|A|2 (k2 + k1 ) k2 + k1
Setting this to 0.5, we have,
( )2
k2 k1
= 0.5
k2 + k1
k2 k1
= 0.5 (41)
k2 + k1
k2 k1
At rst consider = + 0.5
k2 + k1
k2 k1 = 0.5 (k2 + k1 )
k2 (1 0.5) = k1 (1 + 0.5)
k2 1 + 0.5 1.707
= = = 5.82 ,
k1 1 0.5 0.293
which is the required ratio. Note that since k2 > k1 , for 50% reection (or 50% transmission),
the discontinuity must in fact be a depression instead of an elevation, as shown below.
Vo
x=0
If instead, we take the other possibility, i.e. the R.H.S in equation (41) is with a negative
sign,
k2 k1
= 0.5
k2 + k1
k2 k1 = 0.5 (k2 + k1 )
k2 (1 + 0.5) = k1 (1 0.5)
k2 1 0.5 0.293
= = = 0.17 .
k1 1 + 0.5 1.707
In this second case, k2 < k1 , so the discontinuity is an elevation, as shown below.
Vo
x=0
Answer 26:
In thermionic emission, heating increases the thermal energy of the electrons. These
electrons are raised from the lled to the unlled levels. Some of these excited electrons
obtain enough energy to overcome the work function and can therefore be ejected into air.
Answer 27:
Option (d) is the correct answer. The quantum dot is given a variable positive potential
V0 . An electron added to the quantum dot raises its coulomb energy by e2 /2Cdot . Hence
if energy is to be conserved and the electron transfer to the dot is to be favored, the
starting energy of the dot must be lower by e2 /2Cdot , so that pickup of an extra electron
is energetically permissible. If V0 = 0, the electron cannot tunnel into n = 7 as it will raise
the overall energy of the dot. If, however, V0 = e/2Cdot , n = 7 is lowered in energy by
e2 /2Cdot and electron tunneling to n = 7 becomes energetically permissible. The electron
tunnel! While keeping its total energy constant. The quantum dot is a receptacle lowering
its energy in anticipation of an incoming electron, which raises the energy back to the
original. Hence four peaks corresponding to tunneling to n = 7, 8, 9, 10 are observed.
Answer 28:
Option (c) is the correct answer. If v is to go up in region III, k must increase. Since
k E V , the dierence between E and V must be higher, which is the situation in
Fig.(c).
Answer 29:
In the refracting medium, the electric potential is positive and hence the potential energy
seen by the electron, V , is lower. This means that the dierence E V is larger, k is larger,
and hence the speed is slower, v2 < v1 . Hence from Bethes law, sin < sin , < . The
electron beam bends away from the normal. Hence option (c) is the correct answer.
Answer 30:
As we know that when a quantum object encounters a wider barrier, the tunneling transmis-
sion probability is lower. If the barrier is thinner the tunneling probability is higher. In the
given gure we can see that the barrier on the right is thinner. Therefore it is more proba-
ble to nd the electron in region C as compared to A. Hence option (b) is the correct answer.
Answer 31:
One need to think carefully about this. Consider the accompanying gure.
Vo
II (x) = Ceik2 x ,
2mE 2m(E+V0 )
where k12 = ~
, and k2 = ~
. At the point of the precipice, x = 0, I (0) = II (0)
and I (0) = II
(0). So A + B = C and ik1 (A B) = ik2 C. Eliminating C from these
equations,
ik1 (A B)
A+B =
ik2
k1 k1
= A B
k2 k2
( ) ( )
k1 k1
B 1+ = A 1
k2 k2
B k1 k2
=
A k1 + k2
|B|2 k1
R =
|A|2 k1
( )2
k1 k2
= .
k1 + k2
( )2
If V0 is very large, k2 k1 , R becomes kk22 = 1. Since R 1, T = 0. There is zero
probability for the particle to fall over the edge and enter region II. Hence option (a) is
the correct answer.
Answer 32:
Answer 33:
As we know that general equation of wave function is,
(x, t) = Aeikxt .
Comparison of this equation with the given wave equation of for the free particle yields,
k = 2.5 1011 m1
= 2.1 1013 s1 .
~2 d2 d
TDSE : 2
(x, t) = i~ (x, t).
2m dx dt
Inserting the supplied wave function into the above, the relationship 2 = k/m auto-
matically pops out. Students are tempted to use E = ~ and E = p2 /2m. The former
relationship does not hold for all particles, it is specic in its meaningit says that energy
of a photon E is related to the frequency of the electromagnetic wave associated with the
photon. Blindly using these relations is wrong!
Answer 34:
Since the length of innite well is very large i.e. 30 cm, for a small amount of energy 1 eV,
the number of nodes will be very large i.e. 4.9 108 . Since the number of nodes is very
large, the waves are squeezed close together, the de Broglie wavelength is extremely small
obscuring chances of observing the quantum wave behavior at the classical macroscopic
scale. At such a high value of n, quantum eects are not visible. Another way of looking at
this is that the wave function is such that the probability of nding the electron becomes
equal everywhere, i.e. it imparting the electron a continuous quality rather than quantized.
All of this ties in well with Bohrs corresponding principle.
Answer 35:
We are given that,
1 ( )
At t = 0 (x, 0) = 1 (x) + 22 (x)
5L
1 ( )
At any time t (x, t) = 1 (x)eiE1 t/~ + 22 (x)eiE2 t/~ .
5L
If E1 is the energy of ground state, energy of rst excited state will be E2 = 4E1 .
1 ( )
(x, t) = 1 (x)eiE1 t/~ + 22 (x)ei4E1 t/~
5L
~ 1 ( )
At t = (x, t) = 1 (x)ei + 22 (x)ei4
E1 5L
1 ( )
= 1 (x)(1) + 22 (x)(+1)
5L
1 ( )
= 1 (x) + 22 (x) .
5L
Now we need to nd out what 1 (x) + 22 (x) looks like. The construction is seen in the
series of diagrams below.
1 (x)+ 2 2 (x)
2
2 2 (x) Add 1
-1
-2
-2
Answer 36:
Option (d) is the correct answer. The wavefunction is zero at x b because of the innite
potential and extends into the region x a. Furthermore, the value of k increases and
wavelength decreases as we go from x = a to x = b.
Answer 37:
Option (a) is the correct answer.
Answer 38:
We are given the wavefunction of free particle,
= A2 (1 + e2ikx + e2ikx + 1)
= A2 (2 + e2ikx + e2ikx ).
eix +eix
Using cos x = 2
= 2A2 (1 + cos(2kx))
3. True because the forward and backward propagating waves have equal amplitudes
and the probability density does not change with time.
Answer 39:
According to uncertainty principle,
~
px .
2
If particle moves in a circle of radius r and angular momentum L, then
L = pr
L = pr
L
p =
r
and x = r.
L ~
r
r 2
~
L .
2
Answer 40:
We are given that,
Ti = e2L .
If tip moves closer to the surface by L, nal tunneling probability will become,
Tf = e2(LL) .
Tf e2(LL)
=
Ti e2L
= e2L
9 0.1109
= e210
= e0.2
= 1.22.
Hence there is a 22% increase in the tunneling current and the correct answer is (b).
Answer 41:
(a) We are given that,
E = pc.
E cp. (42)
Uncertainty in momentum p for a photon conned to the tiny box of size x can be
calculated by using the uncertainty relation,
~
x p ,
2
where ~ is the reduced Plancks constant.
~
p .
2x
Using this value of p in equation (42) yields,
( )
~
E c
2x
c~
E
2x
(b) We are given that,
E E
c~
E=
2x
Eective mass can be calculated by using energy-mass relationship,
E = me c2 ,
and let speed of the object to escape from the stars gravitational pull is vesc . In order to
escape from the gravitational pull of star, kinetic energy of the object should be at least
equal to the gravitational potential energy.
K.E. = P.E.
1 2 mM
mvesc. = G
2 R
2 2GM
vesc. =
R
2GM
vesc. = .
R
Which is the required result.
Diameter of photon = 2 fm
15
= 2 10 m
Diameter of photon
= 2 1015 m
in Plancks length 1.6 1035 m/Planck length
Answer 42:
We are given that,
= 8 1013 J
T = e2L
m1 351015 m
= e29.7510
14
= e68.25
= 2.29 1030 .
The probability that an alpha particle hitting the nucleus surface will escape is 2.29 1030 .