Title: From Last Time(s)
1From Last Time(s)
Light shows both particle and wave-like properties
Atoms emit and absorb photons
Photon Ehf
2Exam 3 is Thursday Dec. 3 (after Thanksgiving)
- Students w / scheduled academic conflict please
stay after class Tues. Nov. 24 to arrange
alternate time.
530-7 pm, Birge 145
Covers all material since exam 2.
Bring Calculator One (double-sided) 8 1/2 x 11
note sheet
Schedule Week14HW assigned Thur. Nov. 19, due
Fri. Dec. 4 (two weeks) Exam 3 practice problems
available at Mastering Physics Last material
for exam Lecture of Tues. Nov. 24 Exam review
Tuesday, Dec. 1, in class
3Photon properties of light
- Photon of frequency f has energy hf
-
-
-
- Red light made of ONLY red photons
- The intensity of the beam can be increased by
increasing the number of photons/second. - (Photons/second)(Energy/photon) energy/second
power
4Emitting and absorbing light
Zero energy
n4
n4
n3
n3
n2
n2
Photon emittedhfE2-E1
Photon absorbed hfE2-E1
n1
n1
Absorbing a photon of correct energy makes
electron jump to higher quantum state.
- Photon is emitted when electron drops from one
quantum state to another
5Matter waves
- If light waves have particle-like properties,
maybe matter has wave properties? - de Broglie postulated that the wavelength of
matter is related to momentum as - This is called the de Broglie wavelength.
Nobel prize, 1929
6Why h / p ? Works for photons
- Wave interpretation of light
- wavelength (Speed of Light) / Frequency
- ? c / f
- Particle interpretation of light (photons)
- Energy (Plancks constant) x Frequency
- E hf, so f E / h
But photon momentum p E / c
7- We argue that applies to everything
- Photons and footballs both follow the same
relation. - Everything has both wave-like and particle-like
properties
8Wavelengths of massive objects
9Matter Waves
- deBroglie postulated that matter has wavelike
properties. - deBroglie wavelength
Example Wavelength of electron with 10 eV of
energy Kinetic energy
10Wavelength of a football
- Make the Right Call The NFL's Own
interpretations and guidelines plus 100s of
official rulings on game situations. National
FootBall League, Chicago. 1999 "... short
circumference, 21 to 21 1/4 inches weight, 14
to 15 ounces. (0.43 - 0.40 kg) - Sometimes I dont know how they catch that ball,
because Brett wings that thing 60, 70
mph, Flanagan said. (27 - 32 m/s)
Need m, v to find ?
Aaron
Wells
11This is very small
- 1 nm 10-9 m
- Wavelength of red light 700 nm
- Spacing between atoms in solid 0.25 nm
- Wavelength of football 10-26 nm
- What makes football wavelength so small?
Large mass, large momentumshort wavelength
12Suppose an electron is a wave
- Here is a wave
-
- where is the electron?
- Wave extends infinitely far in x and -x
direction
l
13Analogy with sound
- Sound wave also has the same characteristics
- But we can often locate sound waves
- E.g. echoes bounce from walls. Can make a sound
pulse - Example
- Hand clap duration 0.01 seconds
- Speed of sound 340 m/s
- Spatial extent of sound pulse 3.4 meters.
- 3.4 meter long hand clap travels past you at 340
m/s
14Beat frequency spatial localization
- What does a sound particle look like?
- Examplebeat frequency between two notes
- Two waves of almost same wavelength added.
15Making a particle out of waves
440 Hz 439 Hz
440 Hz 439 Hz 438 Hz
440 Hz 439 Hz 438 Hz 437 Hz 436 Hz
16Adding many sound waves
- Six sound waves with different wavelength added
together?1? ?2 ?/1.05 ?3 ?/1.10 ?4 ?/1.15
?5 ?/1.20 ?6 ?/1.25
- Wave now resembles a particle, but what is the
wavelength? - Sound pulse is comprised of several wavelength
- The exact wavelength is indeterminate
17Spatial extent of wave packet
?x
- ?x spatial spread of wave packet
- Spatial extent decreases as the spread in
included wavelengths increases.
18Same occurs for a matter wave
- Localized particlesum of waves with slightly
different wavelengths. - ? h /p, each wave has different momentum.
- There is some uncertainty in the momentum
- Still dont know exact location of the particle!
- Wave still is spread over ?x (uncertainty in
position) - Can reduce ?x, but at the cost of increasing the
spread in wavelength (giving a spread in
momentum).
19Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle
- Using
- ?x position uncertainty
- ?p momentum uncertainty
- Heisenberg showed that the product
- ( ?x ) ? ( ?p ) is always greater than ( h /
4? ) - Often write this as
- where is pronounced h-bar
Plancksconstant
20Uncertainty principle question
- Suppose an electron is inside a box 1 nm in
width. There is some uncertainty in the momentum
of the electron. We then squeeze the box to make
it 0.5 nm. What happens to the momentum
uncertainty? - A. Momentum becomes more uncertain
- B. Momentum becomes less uncertain
- C. Momentum uncertainty unchanged
21The wavefunction
- Quantify this by giving a physical meaning to the
wave that describing the particle. - This wave is called the wavefunction.
- Cannot be experimentally measured!
- But the square of the wavefunction is a physical
quantity. - Its value at some point in space is the
probability of finding the particle there!
22Electron waves in an atom
- Electron is a wave.
- Its propagation direction is around
circumference of orbit. - Wavelength h / p
- Waves on a circle?
23Waves on a circle
- My ToneNut.
- Produces particular pitch.
- Sound wave inside has wavelength ?v/f (red
line). - Integer number of wavelengths required around
circumference - Otherwise destructive interference
- wave travels around ring and interferes with
itself
Blow in here
24Electron Standing Waves
- Electron in circular orbit works same way
- Integer number of deBroglie wavelengths must fit
on circumference of the orbit. - Circumference (2?)x(orbit radius) 2?r
- So condition is
- This says
This is quantization angular momentum (Lmvr)
25Electron standing-waves on an atom
- Electron wave extends around circumference of
orbit. - Only integer number of wavelengths around orbit
allowed.
26Hydrogen atom energies
- Wavelength gets longer in higher n states,
(electron moving slower) so kinetic energy goes
down. - But energy of Coulomb interaction between
electron (-) and nucleus () goes up faster with
bigger n. - End result is
27Hydrogen atom question
- Here is Peter Flanarys sculpture Wave outside
Chamberlin Hall. What quantum state of the
hydrogen atom could this represent? - A. n2
- B. n3
- C. n4
28Hydrogen atom music
- Here the electron is in the n3 orbit.
- Three wavelengths fit along the circumference of
the orbit. - The hydrogen atom is playing its third highest
note. - Highest note (shortest wavelength) is n1.
29Hydrogen atom music
- Here the electron is in the n4 orbit.
- Four wavelengths fit along the circumference of
the orbit. - The hydrogen atom is playing its fourth highest
note (lower pitch than n3 note).
30Hydrogen atom music
- Here the electron is in the n5 orbit.
- Five wavelengths fit along the circumference of
the orbit. - The hydrogen atom is playing its next lowest
note. - The sequence goes on and on, with longer and
longer wavelengths, lower and lower notes.
But Remember that these are higher and higher
energies!(Coulomb (electrostatic) potential
energy dominates).