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Modern Physics (II) Chapter 9: Atomic Structure Chapter 10: Statistical Physics Chapter 11: Molecular Structure Chapter 12-1: The Solid State Chapter 12-2: Superconductivity Serway, Moses, Moyer: Modern Physics Tipler, Llewellyn: Modern Physics Modern Physics I Chap 3: The Quantum Theory of Light Blackbody radiation, photoelectric effect, Compton effect Chap 4: The Particle Nature of Matter Rutherford’s model of the nucleus, the Bohr atom Chap 5: Matter Waves de Broglie’s matter waves, Heisenberg uncertainty principle Chap 6: Quantum Mechanics in One Dimension The Born interpretation, the Schrodinger equation, potential wells Chap 7: Tunneling Phenomena (potential barriers) Chap 8: Quantum Mechanics in Three Dimensions Hydrogen atoms, quantization of angular momentums Chapter 5: Matter Waves de Broglie’s intriguing idea of “matter wave” (1924) Extend notation of “wave-particle duality” from light to matter For photons, P E hf h c Suggests for matter, c The wavelength is detectable only for microscopic objects h de Broglie wavelength P P: relativistic momentum E f de Broglie frequency h E: total relativistic energy (x,t ) contains within it all the information that can be known about the particle (x, t ) is an infinite set of numbers corresponding to the wavefunction value at every point x at time t Properties of wavefunction x, t Finite, single-valued, and continuous on x and t Normalization: x, t x x, t dx 1 2 The particle can be found somewhere with certainty must be “smooth” and continuous where U(x) has a finite value The one-dimensional Schrödinger wave equation x, t 2 x, t U x, t x, t i 2 2m x t 2 Time-independent Schrödinger equation U(x,t ) = U(x), independent of time d 2 ( x ) U x x E x 2 2m dx 2 Solution: x, t x e E: total energy of the particle E i t Probability density at any given position x (independent of time) P x x,t x,t x x stationary states Time-independent Schrödinger equation Separation of variables : (x,t ) = (x)·(t ) d 2 ( x ) d t t U x x t i x 2 2m dx dt 2 1 d 2 ( x ) 1 d t U x i = E = constant 2 2m x dx t dt 2 Independent of t Independent of x 2 2 d ( x) spatial 2m dx 2 U x x E x E i t d t temporal i E t t e dt E A particle in a finite square well 0, U(x) U o , 0xL Region II elsewhere Region I, III d 2 ( x ) 2m 2 [U ( x ) E ] ( x ) 0 2 dx Region I: Region II: I ( x ) C1e U0 I II 0 Need to solve Schrodinger wave equation in regions I, II, and III x U(x) >0 II ( x) B1 sin kx B2 cos kx x Region III: III ( x ) D2e Consider: III L x E < U0 The wavefunctions look very similar to those for the infinite square well, except the particle has a finite probability of “leaking out” of the well Finite square Well (x) U0 I n=1 0 U(x) U0 II U0 III L I II x x 0 U(x) Penetration depth I L III x 0 n=2 U0 II 2m U o E No classical analogy !! III n=3 Example: A particle in an infinite square well of width L n n 2 Ln 2 2 kn n kn L Pn kn Pn 2 n 2 2 2 En 2m 2mL2 Momentum is quantized. Energy is quantized ! The notion of quantum number: n The Square Barrier Potential Uo where 0 x L U ( x) elsewhere 0 Resonance transmission at certain energies E > U0 Ux Uo I 0 n 2 2 2 E Uo 2mL2 A finite transmission through the barrier at E < U0 if the barrier is made sufficiently thin III II L x Expectation values For a given wavefunction (x,t ), there are two types of measurable quantities: eigenvalues, expectation values Observables (可觀測量) and Operators (算符) An “observable” is any particle property that can be measured Expectation value Q predicts the average value for Q Q x,t Q x,t dx Q x,t q x,t (x,t ) is the “eigenfunction” and q is the “eigenvalue” q = constant The Schrödinger wave equation: H Ψ=[E]Ψ Examples of eigenvalues and eigenfunctions U = central forces Lz Yl ml , ml Yl , ml L Yl , l (l 1) 2 ml U = 0, a free particle 2 Yl , ml Aeikx t i kx t [ P] A ik e ( k ) i x i i kx t [ E ] i i A i e ( ) t Three-dimensional Schrödinger equation h2 2 2 2 x , y , z , t U ( x , y , z , t ) x , y , z , t ih x , y , z ,t 2 2 2 2m x y z t h2 2 x, y , z ,t U ( x, y , z, t ) x, y , z,t ih x, y , z,t 2m t Time-independent Schrödinger equation: 2 r U r r E r 2 2m Particle in a system with central forces ẑ electron nucleus U r U (r ) r ŷ ( Ze)( e) 4 o r a central force !! x̂ Require use of spherical coordinates ( r , t ) ( x , y , z , t ) ( r , , , t ) Time-independent Schrödinger equation 2 2m 2 r , , U r r , , E r , , principal quantum number orbital quantum number magnetic quantum number d 2 2 m 0 2 d 1 d d m2 sin 2 sin d d sin 1 d 2 dR 2m r 2 dr r dr 2 E U r ml 1 0 l 1 R 0 2 r R r n r r, , R r For any central force U(r ), angular momentum is quantized by the rules L l (l 1) = 1, 2, 3, … (n-1) and Lz ml ml = 0, 1, 2, … Since |L| and Lz are quantized differently, L cannot orient in the z-axis direction. |L| > Lz Z En 8 o ao n 2 e 2 Degeneracy for a given n 2 n = 1, 2, 3,… n 1 2 2 1 n 0 Probability of finding electron of a hydrogen-like atom in the spherical shell between r and r + dr from the nucleus Pn, r dr r 2 Rn, r Rn, r dr 0.52 Å l=0 Excited States of Hydrogen-like Atoms The first excited state: n = 2 200 fourfold degenerate 2s state, is spherically symmetric 210 , 211, 211 2p states, is not spherically symmetric 210 2 211 2 Rn, r e Zr / na0 (2/23/2009, 2h)