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Electromagnetic radiation behaves as particles 1. 2. 3. Notes of the problem discussed Tuesday. Quiz 9.11 and a few comments on quiz 9.09. Topics in EM waves as particles: Tuesday today Blackbody radiation and Planck’s constant, Planck’s Nobel Prize in physics. The Photoelectric Effect and Einstein's Nobel Prize in physics. The X-rays and Roentgen’s Nobel Prize in physics. The Compton Effect and Compton’s Nobel Prize in physics. Pair production, energy to mass conversion and Anderson’s Nobel Prize in physics. The wave-particle duality and the door to yet another new world. One page review of Special Relativity S and S’ system: z' z v S’ moves with velocity v in S along the x-axis. y' y S' x' v 1 1 2 v c x S x' v x vt y' y z' z L Lproper v uv u x ' u x v 1 x 2 c t v tproper uv u y ' u y v 1 x 2 c 1 uv u z ' u z v 1 x 2 c 1 v t' v 2 x t c , 1 For a particle with velocity u in S: p u mu E u mc 2 KE u 1 mc2 1 u c E 2 p 2c 2 m2c 4 The Doppler effect: f f When θ =0, the course is moving 1 2 2 u source obs v 1 cos away from the observer. problem 33, page 64 Step 1, choose reference systems v Ground: S 1 0.9950 0.9954 0.9952c, v 10.22 2 On the muon: S’ Step 2, interpreter proper length and time in their systems in S: L0 1910m in S’: 0 2.2μs L L0 v 186.89m v 0 22.48μs Solve it in S: Solve it in S’: The time it takes the muons to cover the distance L0: The time it takes the muons to cover the distance L: t L0 1910 s 6.40μs v 0.9952 3 108 Now verify: N N e 0 N 395 0.75 N 0 527 So N N0e e t t' L 186.89 s 0.63μs v 0.9952 3 108 t 6.40 22.48 Since e 0.75 is verified. N N0e 0.63 2.2 t' 0 0.75 and is verified. N 395 0.75 N 0 527 The Compton Effect When two waves meet, they superposition each other. When two particles meet, they collide. When X-rays meet electrons Compton scatter, behave exactly as two particles collide: The energy of a photon with frequency f is: E hf So its momentum E hf h p c c 2 2 2 2 4 hint E p c m c In the x-ray electron system, the initial momentum is ph The final moment is h ' cos u meucos x-component y-component h ' sin u meusin Based on moment conservation: h h ' cos u meucos 0 h ' sin u meusin And energy conservation: ch me c 2 ch ' u me c 2 Solve the above three equations (all algebraic ' h 1 cos manipulation) We have: me c y x Example 3.3 Compton scattering and incident photon’s wavelength is known. Asked: momenta of incident photon, scattered photon and the electron. Relevant formulas and concept: ph ' h 1 cos me c Work on the blackboard. Momentum conservation Example 3.4 Employ energy and momentum conservation laws. h c mHe c 2 2 0.6c mD c 2 p photon h 2 0.6c mD 0.6c cos Work on the blackboard. Pair production, energy to mass conversion When photon with energy above the rest mass of two electrons ( 2me c 2 ) interact with the electric field of a nucleus, this photon may be turned into a pair of electron and positron. This process is called pair production through which energy gets turned into mass. Positron is the anti-particle of electron: it has the same mass as an electron but the opposite charge. When a particle and anti-particle meet, they annihilate into a photon, the process that mass converts into energy. Example 3.5: energy conservation. F qE qv B What is the B-field direction? Pair production in a bubble chamber What is the magnetic field direction? electron positron The wave-particle duality Wave or particle? Depends on the wavelength ( ) and the dimensions ( D ) in your experiment. D: particle D: wave The double-slit experiment ph E hf Wave Particle as Wave Example 3.6 How do we solve this problem? For (a), we have wavelength and the power intensity, and this formula: E nh c The number of photons is what in the question. For (b), the minimum at the interference pattern has no light no photons For (c), from 1 I I 0 cos 2 2 We calculate the power intensity at this place, and then repeat the procedures in (a). Review questions List the arguments in this chapter that photon is a particle. List the arguments in this chapter that photon is a wave. When you treat photon as a wave? When as a particle? Preview for the next class Text to be read: In chapter 4: Section 4.1 Section 4.2 Section 4.3 Questions: What is the Bragg Law? An electron is a particle. One cannot have half an electron. How do you interpret the amplitude of an electron wave? What is the form of the Shroedinger equation for free particle? Homework 5, due by 9/23 1. 2. 3. 4. Problem 31 on page 94. Problem 35 on page 94. Problem 40 on page 94. Problem 42 on page 94.