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Quantum Mechanics 1 Electrons behave as waves (interference etc) and also particles (fixed mass, charge, number) Lessons on http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/quacon.html#quacon 2 or http://www.colorado.edu/physics/2000/quantumzone/ Science at the end of ~1900: Classical Mechanics 3 Leading to Mech. Engg., Civil Engg., Chem. Engg. 4 Science at the end of ~1900: Electromagnetics Rainbows Polaroids Lightning Northern Lights Telescope Laser Optics 5 Science at the end of ~1900: Electromagnetics Electronic Gadgets 6 Science at the end of ~1900: Electromagnetics Chemical Reactions Neural Impulses Biological Processes Ion Channels Chemistry and Biology 7 But there were puzzles !!! Dalton (1808) What does an atom look like ??? Solar system model of atom mv2/r = Zq2/4pe0r2 Centripetal force Electrostatic force Continuous radiation from orbiting electron Pb1: Atom would be unstable! (expect nanoseconds observe billion years!) Spectrum of Helium Transitions E0(1/n2 – 1/m2) (n,m: integers) Pb2: Spectra of atoms are discrete! 9 Bohr’s suggestion Only certain modes allowed (like a plucked string) nl = 2pr (fit waves on circle) Momentum ~ 1/wavelength (DeBroglie) p = mv = h/l (massive classical particles vanishing l) This means angular momentum is quantized mvr = nh/2p = nħ From 2 equations, rn = (n2/Z) a0 a0 = h2e0/pq2m = 0.529 Å (Bohr radius) 10 Bohr’s suggestion E = mv2/2 – Zq2/4pe0r Using previous two equations En = (Z2/n2)E0 E0 = -mq4/8ħ2e0 = -13.6 eV = 1 Rydberg Transitions E0(1/n2 – 1/m2) (n,m: integers) Explains discrete atomic spectra So need a suitable Wave equation so that imposing boundary conditions will yield the correct quantized solutions 11 What should our wave equation look like? ∂2y/∂t2 = v2(∂2y/∂x2) String y w x k Solution: y(x,t) = y0ei(kx-wt) w2 = v2k2 What is the dispersion (w-k) for a particle? 12 What should our wave equation look like? Quantum theory: E=hf = ħw (Planck’s Law) p = h/l = ħk (de Broglie Law) and E = p2/2m + U (energy of a particle) w Thus, dispersion we are looking for is w k2 + U So we need one time-derivative and two spatial derivatives k 2y/∂tX 2 = v2(∂2y/∂x2) ∂X 13 Wave equation (Schrodinger) iħ∂Y/∂t = (-ħ22/2m + U)Y Kinetic Energy Potential Energy Makes sense in context of waves Eg. free particle U=0 Solution Y = Aei(kx-wt) = Aei(px-Et)/ħ w k We then get E = p2/2m = ħ2k2/2m 14 For all time-independent problems iħ∂Y/∂t = (-ħ22/2m + U)Y = ĤY Separation of variables for static potentials Y(x,t) = f(x)e-iEt/ħ Oscillating solution in time Ĥf = Ef, Ĥ = -ħ22/2m + U BCs : Ĥfn = Enfn (n = 1,2,3...) En : eigenvalues (usually fixed by BCs) fn(x): eigenvectors/stationary states 15