Quantum Theory I INTRODUCTION Quantum Theory, in physics, description of the particles that make up matter and how they interact with each other and with energy.
Publié le 12/05/2013
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electron in the same way a particle with momentum would: It bumps the electron and changes the electron’s path.
The light is also affected by the collision as though itwere a particle, in that its energy and momentum changes.
Momentum is a quantity that can be defined for all particles.
For light particles, or photons, momentum depends on the frequency, or color, of the photon, which in turndepends on the photon’s energy.
The energy of a photon is equal to a constant number, called Planck’s constant, times the frequency of the photon.
Planck’s constantis named for German physicist Max Planck, who first proposed the relationship between energy and frequency.
The accepted value of Planck’s constant is 6.626 × 10 -34 joule-second.
This number is very small—written out, it is a decimal point followed by 33 zeroes, followed by the digits 6626.
The energy of a single photon is thereforevery small.
The dual nature of light seems puzzling because we have no everyday experience with wave-particle duality.
Waves are everyday phenomena; we are all familiar withwaves on a body of water or on a vibrating rope.
Particles, too, are everyday objects—baseballs, cars, buildings, and even people can be thought of as particles.
But toour senses, there are no everyday objects that are both waves and particles.
Scientists increasingly find that the rules that apply to the world we see are onlyapproximations of the rules that govern the unseen world of light and subatomic particles.
B Matter as Waves and Particles
In 1923 French physicist Louis de Broglie suggested that all particles—not just photons—have both wave and particle properties.
He calculated that every particle has awavelength (represented by λ, the Greek letter lambda ) equal to Planck’s constant (h) divided by the momentum (p) of the particle: λ = h/p.
Electrons, atoms, and all other particles have de Broglie wavelengths.
The momentum of an object depends on its speed and mass, so the faster and heavier an object is, the larger itsmomentum (p) will be.
Because Planck’s constant (h) is an extremely tiny number, the de Broglie wavelength (h/p) of any visible object is exceedingly small.
In fact, thede Broglie wavelength of anything much larger than an atom is smaller than the size of one of its atoms.
For example, the de Broglie wavelength of a baseball moving at150 km/h (90 mph) is 1.1 × 10 -34 m (3.6 × 10 -34 ft).
The diameter of a hydrogen atom (the simplest and smallest atom) is about 5 × 10 -11 m (about 2 × 10 -10 ft), more than 100 billion trillion times larger than the de Broglie wavelength of the baseball.
The de Broglie wavelengths of everyday objects are so tiny that the wavenature of these objects does not affect their visible behavior, so their wave-particle duality is undetectable to us.
De Broglie wavelengths become important when the mass, and therefore momentum, of particles is very small.
Particles the size of atoms and electrons havedemonstrable wavelike properties.
One of the most dramatic and interesting demonstrations of the wave behavior of electrons comes from the double-slit experiment.This experiment consists of a barrier set between a source of electrons and an electron detector.
The barrier contains two slits, each about the width of the de Brogliewavelength of an electron.
On this small scale, the wave nature of electrons becomes evident, as described in the following paragraphs.
Scientists can determine whether the electrons are behaving like waves or like particles by comparing the results of double-slit experiments with those of similarexperiments performed with visible waves and particles.
To establish how visible waves behave in a double-slit apparatus, physicists can replace the electron source witha device that creates waves in a tank of water.
The slits in the barrier are about as wide as the wavelength of the water waves.
In this experiment, the waves spreadout spherically from the source until they hit the barrier.
The waves pass through the slits and spread out again, producing two new wave fronts with centers as farapart as the slits are.
These two new sets of waves interfere with each other as they travel toward the detector at the far end of the tank.
The waves interfere constructively in some places (adding together) and destructively in others (canceling each other out).
The most intense waves—that is, thoseformed by the most constructive interference—hit the detector at the spot opposite the midpoint between the two slits.
These strong waves form a peak of intensity onthe detector.
On either side of this peak, the waves destructively interfere and cancel each other out, creating a low point in intensity.
Further out from these lowpoints, the waves are weaker, but they constructively interfere again and create two more peaks of intensity, smaller than the large peak in the middle.
The intensitythen drops again as the waves destructively interfere.
The intensity of the waves forms a symmetrical pattern on the detector, with a large peak directly across fromthe midpoint between the slits and alternating low points and smaller and smaller peaks on either side.
To see how particles behave in the double-slit experiment, physicists replace the water with marbles.
The barrier slits are about the width of a marble, as the point ofthis experiment is to allow particles (in this case, marbles) to pass through the barrier.
The marbles are put in motion and pass through the barrier, striking the detectorat the far end of the apparatus.
The results show that the marbles do not interfere with each other or with themselves like waves do.
Instead, the marbles strike thedetector most frequently in the two points directly opposite each slit.
When physicists perform the double-slit experiment with electrons, the detection pattern matches that produced by the waves, not the marbles.
These results show thatelectrons do have wave properties.
However, if scientists run the experiment using a barrier whose slits are much wider than the de Broglie wavelength of the electrons,the pattern resembles the one produced by the marbles.
This shows that tiny particles such as electrons behave as waves in some circumstances and as particles inothers.
C Uncertainty Principle
Before the development of quantum theory, physicists assumed that, with perfect equipment in perfect conditions, measuring any physical quantity as accurately asdesired was possible.
Quantum mechanical equations show that accurate measurement of both the position and the momentum of a particle at the same time isimpossible.
This rule is called Heisenberg’s uncertainty principle after German physicist Werner Heisenberg, who derived it from other rules of quantum theory.
Theuncertainty principle means that as physicists measure a particle’s position with more and more accuracy, the momentum of the particle becomes less and less precise,or more and more uncertain, and vice versa.
Heisenberg formally stated his principle by describing the relationship between the uncertainty in the measurement of a particle’s position and the uncertainty in themeasurement of its momentum.
Heisenberg said that the uncertainty in position (represented by Δx) times the uncertainty in momentum (represented by Δp;) must begreater than a constant number equal to Planck’s constant (h) divided by 4 p (p is a constant approximately equal to 3.14).
Mathematically, the uncertainty principle can be written as Δx Δp > h / 4 p.
This relationship means that as a scientist measures a particle’s position more and more accurately—so the uncertainty in its position becomes very small—the uncertainty in its momentum must become large to compensate and make this expression true.
Likewise, if the uncertainty in momentum, Δp,becomes small, Δx must become large to make the expression true.
One way to understand the uncertainty principle is to consider the dual wave-particle nature of light and matter.
Physicists can measure the position and momentum ofan atom by bouncing light off of the atom.
If they treat the light as a wave, they have to consider a property of waves called diffraction when measuring the atom’sposition.
Diffraction occurs when waves encounter an object—the waves bend around the object instead of traveling in a straight line.
If the length of the waves is muchshorter than the size of the object, the bending of the waves just at the edges of the object is not a problem.
Most of the waves bounce back and give an accuratemeasurement of the object’s position.
If the length of the waves is close to the size of the object, however, most of the waves diffract, making the measurement of theobject’s position fuzzy.
Physicists must bounce shorter and shorter waves off an atom to measure its position more accurately.
Using shorter wavelengths of light,however, increases the uncertainty in the measurement of the atom’s momentum.
Light carries energy and momentum, because of its particle nature (described in the Compton effect).
Photons that strike the atom being measured will change the.
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