Sunteți pe pagina 1din 29

Light is . . .

•Initially thought to be waves


•They do things waves do, like diffraction and interference
•Wavelength – frequency relationship cf
•Planck, Einstein, Compton showed us they behave like particles (photons)
•Energy comes in chunks
•Wave-particle duality: somehow, they behave like both E  hf
•Photons also carry momentum
•Momentum comes in chunks

p  E c  hf c  h  p  h

Electrons are . . .
•They act like particles
•Energy, momentum, etc., come in chunks
•They also behave quantum mechanically
•Is it possible they have wave properties as well?
The de Broglie Hypothesis
•Two equations that relate the particle-like and E  hf
wave-like properties of light
1924 – Louis de Broglie postulated that these
p h
relationships apply to electrons as well
•Implied that it applies to other particles as well
•de Broglie could simply explain the Bohr quantization condition
•Compare the wavelength of an electron in hydrogen to the circumference of
its path

L  n  mevr  pr 
hr 2 r

 
cancel 
n  2 r  C
Integer number of wavelengths fit around the orbit
Measuring wave properties of electrons
•What energy electrons do we want? p h

 4.136 10 eV  s   3.00 10 m/s 


15 2 8 2
2 2 2
p hc
E  mv 
1
 2
2 2 
2m 2mc  2  0.511106 eV   2
2

18 2
1.504 10 eV  m 2
 nm 
  1.504 eV  
2   
For atomic separations, want distances around 0.3 nm  energies of 10 or so eV
How can we measure these wave properties?
•Scatter off crystals, just like we did for X-rays!
•Complication: electrons change speed inside crystal
•Work function  increases kinetic energy in the crystal
•Momentum increases in the crystal
•Wavelength changes
The Davisson-Germer Experiment
Same experiment as scattering X-rays, except
•Reflection probability from each layer greater
•Interference effects are weaker
•Momentum/wavelength is shifted inside the
material
e- •Equation for good scattering identical

2d cos  m

 

Quantum effects are weird


•Electron must scatter off of all layers
The Results:
•1928: Electrons have both wave and particle properties
•1900: Photons have both wave and particle properties
•1930: Atoms have both wave and particle properties
•1930: Molecules have both wave and particle properties
•Neutrons have both wave and particle properties
•Protons have both wave and particle properties
•Everything has both wave and particle properties

Dr. Carlson has a mass of 82 kg and leaves this room


at a velocity of about 1.3 m/s. What is his wavelength?

h h 6.626 1034 J  s
    6.22 1036 m
p mv  82 kg 1.3 m/s 
Waves: How come we don’t notice?
•Whenever waves encounter a barrier, they get diffracted, When wave-
their direction changes lengths are
•If the barrier is much larger then the waves, the waves short, wave
change direction very little effects are
•If the barrier is much smaller then the waves, then the effect hard to notice
is enormous, and the wave diffracts a lot
l

Light waves through a big hole Sound waves through a small hole
Simple Waves
 •cos and sin have periodicity
2
•If you increase kx by 2, wave
will look the same
•If you increase t by 2,
wave will look the same
•Simple waves look like cosines or sines:
•k is called the wave number
•Units of inverse meters   x, t   A cos  kx  t 
• is called the angular frequency   x, t   A sin  kx  t 
•Units of inverse seconds
•Wavelength  is how far you have to go in space before it repeats
•Related to wave number k   2 k
•Period T is how long you have to wait in time before it repeats
•Related to angular frequency    2 T  2 f
•Frequency f is how many times per second it repeats
•The reciprocal of period
Math Interlude: Partial Derivatives
•Ordinary derivatives are the local “slope” of a d f  x f  x  h  f  x
function of one variable f(x)  lim
dx h 0 h
•Partial derivatives are the local “slope”
of a function of two or more variables f  x, y   lim f  x  h, y   f  x, y 
f(x,y) in one particular direction x h 0 h
•Partial derivatives are calculated the same way as ordinary derivatives, except other
variables are treated as constant
d  Ax2  B
dx
e e  Ax 2  B d

dx
  Ax  B   2 Axe
2  Ax2  B

  Ax 2  Ay 2  e  Ax2  Ay 2   Ax 2  Ay 2
e
x
   2 Axe  Ax 2  Ay 2

x
Calculate the partial derivative below:
 
cos  kx  t    sin  kx  t   kx  t   k sin  kx  t 
x x
Dispersion Relations
 E
2
 E
2
•Waves come about from the solution of differential equations z
 c 2 z
0
•For example, for light t 2
x 2

•These equations lead to relationships between the angular frequency 


and the wave number k    k 
•Called a dispersion relation
What is the dispersion relationship for light in vacuum?
Need to find a solution to wave equation, let’s try:

E  A cos kx  t 
Ez Ez
z
 kA sin  kx  t    A sin  kx  t 
x t
 Ez
2
 2 Ez
  k 2
A cos  kx  t    A cos  kx  t 
2
 x
2
t 2
 2  c2k 2
 2 A cos  kx  t   c2k 2 A cos  kx  t   0   ck
Phase velocity 1 
f  
T 2
 k  2

vp   f 
k

•The wave moves a distance of one wavelength  in one period T


•From this, we can calculate the phase velocity denoted vp
•It is how fast the peaks and valleys move
   f 2  
vp   
T k 2 k
What is the phase
ck  c Not constant for
velocity for light vp   most waves!
in vacuum? k k
Adding two waves
•Real waves are almost always combinations of multiple wavelengths
•Average these two expressions to get a new wave:  1  cos  k1 x  1t 
  x, t   12 cos  k1x  1t   12 cos  k2 x  2t   2  cos  k2 x  2t 

•This wave has two kinds of oscillations:


•The oscillations at small scales
•The “lumps” at large scales
Analyzing the sum of two waves:
  x, t   12 cos  k1x  1t   12 cos  k2 x  2t 
cos      cos  cos   sin  sin 
Need to derive some
obscure trig identities:
•Average these: cos      cos  cos   sin  sin 
•Substitute:
1
cos      12 cos      cos  cos 
  12  A  B  2

 1
 A  B
1
2 cos A  12 cos B  cos  12  A  B   cos  12  A  B  
2
Rewrite wave function:

  x, t   cos  kx  t  cos  k  x    t 
k   k1  k2 
1
2 Small scale Large scale k   k1  k2 
1
2

  12 1  2  oscillations oscillations   12 1  2 


The “uncertainty” of k1 k k k2

two waves k
k
Our wave is made of two values of k:
•k is the average value of these two •Each “lump” is spread out in space also
•k is the amount by which the two values of •Define x as the distance from the
k actually vary from k center of a lump to the edge
•The value of k is uncertain by an amount •The distance is where the cosine
k vanishes

Plotted at cos  k x   0
t=0
k x  12 

First hint of
uncertainty principle x k x 1
Group Velocity
  x, t   cos  kx  t  cos  k  x    t 
Small scale Large scale
oscillations oscillations
The velocity of little oscillations governed by the first factor 
•Leads to the same formula as before for phase velocity: vp 
The velocity of big oscillations governed by the second factor
k
•Leads to a formula for group velocity: 
vg 
These need not be the same! k
One wave
More Waves
•Two waves allow you to create localized
“lumps”
•Three waves allow you to start separating Two waves
these lumps
•More waves lets you get them farther and
farther apart Three waves
•Infinity waves allows you to make the other
lumps disappear to infinity – you have one
lump, or a wave packet
•A single lump – a wave packet – looks and Five waves
acts a lot like a particle

Infinity waves
Wave Packets
•We can combine many waves to separate a “lump” from its neighbors
•With an infinite number of waves, we can make a wave packet
•Contains continuum of wave numbers k
•Resulting wave travels and mostly stays together,
like a particle
•Note both k-values and x-values have a spread
k and x.
Phase and Group velocity
Compare to two wave formulas:
•Phase velocity formula is exactly the same, except
we simply rename the average values of k and  as  
simply k and 
vp  vp 
k k
•Group velocity now involves very closely spaced
values of k (and ), and therefore we rewrite the  d
vg  vg 
differences as . . . k dk

What is the phase


and group velocity
for this wave?
Sample Problem
What is the phase and group velocity for this wave?

Moved 30 m 30 m
vp   1.0 m/s
30 s
Finish, t = 30 s
Start, t = 0 s

Moved 60 m
60 m
vg   2.0 m/s
30 s

Phase and Group velocity vp 
k
How to calculate them:
•You need the dispersion relation: the relationship  ck d
between  and k, with only constants in the formula v p  k  k  c vg 
•Example: light in vacuum has   ck dk
d d
What’s wrong with the
vg    ck   c
dk dk
following proof?
If the dispersion relation is  = Ak2,
Theorem: Group velocity doesn’t with A a constant, what are the
always equal phase velocity phase and group velocity?
  kv p
 Ak 2
d vp    Ak
vg  
d
 vpk   v p 
dv p
k  vp
d d
k k
dk dk dk vg  
dk dk
 Ak 2
  2 Ak
The Classical Uncertainty Principle
•The wave number of a wave packet is not exactly one k k
value
•It can be approximated by giving the central
value
•And the uncertainty, the “standard deviation”
from that value
•The position of a wave packet is not exactly one value k
•It can be approximated by giving the central value x x
•And the uncertainty, the “standard deviation” from
that value
These quantities are related:
•Typically, x k ~ 1
x
Precise Relation:
xk  12
(proof hard)
Uncertainty in the Time Domain
Stand and watch a wave go by at one place
•You will see the wave over a period of time t
•You will see the wave with a combination of angular frequencies 
•The same uncertainty relationship applies in this domain

t   12
Estimating Uncertainty: Carlson’s Rule
L/4
A particle/wave is trapped in a L
box of size L
•What is the uncertainty in its ?
position x?
L/2 L/2
Guess of
position
•Best guess: The particle is in the center, x = L/2
•But there is an error x on this amount Exact numbers for x:
•It is no greater than L/2 •Particle in a box: 0.181L
•It is certainly bigger than 0 •Uniform distribution: 0.289L
•Carlson’s rule: use x = L/4
•This rule can be applied in the time domain as well
Sample Problem:
A student is supposed to measure the frequency of an object vibrating at f =
147.0 Hz, but he’s late for his next class, so he only spends 0.100 s gathering
data. How much error is he likely to have due to his hasty data sampling?
•Since the data was taken during 0.100 s, the date fits into a time box of length 0.100 s
•By Carlson’s rule, we have t = 0.0250 s
•By the uncertainty principle (time domain), we have:

t   12  
1
 20.0 s 1
2t
•Since f = /2, this causes an estimated error of
20.0 s 1
f   3.17 Hz
2
•Of course, the error could be much larger than this
Wave Equations You Need:
•These equations always apply
 xk 
vp 
1
1  2
f   k  2 k
t  1
T 2 d 2
vg 
•Two equations describing a
dk
generic wave

  x, t   A cos  kx  t 
  x, t   A sin  kx  t 

•Light waves only

v p  vg  c  3 108 m/s
Math Interlude: Complex Numbers
•A complex number z is a number of the form z = x + iy, where x and y are real
numbers and i = (-1).
•x is called the real part of z and y is called the imaginary part of z.
•The complex conjugate of z, denoted z* is the same number except the sign of the
imaginary part is changed
What’s the imaginary part
z  x  iy x  Re  
z of 4 + 7i?
z*  x  iy y  Im  z  Note: no i
•Adding, subtracting, and multiplying complex numbers is pretty easy:
 3  4i  2  6i   6  18i  8i  24i 2
 6 10i  24  30 10i
•To divide complex numbers, multiply numerator and denominator by the complex
conjugate of the denominator

2  6i 2  6i 3  4i 6  8i  18i  24i 2 18  26i


   
3  4i 3  4i 3  4i 9  16i 2
25
A Useful Identity
Taylor series expansion
f  x   f  0   xf   0   x f   0   x f   0   x f
1
2!
2 1
3!
3 1
4!
4  4
 0 
sin     3!1  3  5!1  5  7!1  7  9!1  9  
Apply to sin, cos,
cos   1          
1
2!
2 1
4!
4 1
6!
6 1
8!
8
and ex functions
e  1 x  x  x  x  x 
x 1
2!
2 1
3!
3 1
4!
4 1
5!
5

In last expression, let x  i

e  1  i 
i
 i    i    i    i    i    i  
1 2 1 3 1 4 1 5 1 6 1 7
2! 3! 4! 5! 6! 7!

 1  i  2!1  2  3!1 i 3  4!1  4  5!1 i 5  6!1  6  7!1 i 7 


 1  2!1  2  4!1  4  6!1  6    i   3!1  3  5!1  5  7!1  7  
 cos  i sin  ei  cos   i sin 
Complex Waves   x, t   A cos  kx  t 
Typical waves look like:   x, t   A sin  kx  t 
1. We’d like to think about them both at once
2. We’d like to make partial derivatives as simple as possible
A mathematical trick lets us achieve both goals simultaneously: 
 ik
• Real part is cosine
• Imaginary part is sine
  x, t   Aei  kx t 
x

This makes the derivatives easier in differential equations:
 i
   i kx t   t
  x, t   A  e   ikAe i  kx  t 
 ik  
x , t
x x
   i kx t  
  x, t   A  e   i Ae
i  kx t 
 i  x , t 
t t
What is the dispersion relationship for light in vacuum?
 2 Ez  2
Ez
 i  Ez  c  ik  Ez  0  2  c2k 2
2 2
c 0
2 2

t 2
x 2
Magnitudes of complex numbers
The magnitude of a complex number z = x + iy denoted |z|, is given by:
•This formula is rarely used
•The square of the magnitude can be written z  x y 2 2

z  x  y  x  i y   x  iy  x  iy   zz*  z
2 2 2 2 2 2 2

This is the easiest way to calculate it


Sample Problem
  2a  ix  
2
What’s the magnitude squared a
 exp   a
of the following expression? a  it  4a 
  2a  ix     2a  ix  
2 2
a a
   *   a  exp   a
2
exp 
a  it a  it  4a   4a 

  2a  ix    2a  ix   8a 2
2 2 2
a
 exp  
a i t
2 2 2
 4a 
a  2i 2 x 2  a  x 
2
 exp    exp   
a t
2 2
 4a  a t
2 2
 2a 

S-ar putea să vă placă și