We start by revisiting two experiments which contravene the laws of classical physics. The observations match with phenomenological explanations that relate particles and waves. Quantum mechanics extends this phenomenology into a consistent general framework.
Compton scattering occurs when X-rays [an electromagnetic (EM) wave of a very small wave length ] hit an electron at rest (e.g., an electron bound in a solid). In the scattering event the wave is deflected and the electron is accelerated to a large velocity , i.e., it acquires a large final momentum . (We use boldface letters to denote vectors in three-dimensional space.) One observes that the wave changes its wave length to , and that this change depends on the deflection angle (i.e., the position of the detector which collects the scattered wave).
Classical electromagnetism does not permit such a change of wave length. In this theory, a plane wave with fixed propagation direction has space and time dependence
(1) |
where is the angular frequency (with the usual frequency), while is the wave vector, which points into the propagation direction and has length . The scalar is called the wave number, and is strictly related to the angular frequency via the relation , where is the speed of light. Upon scattering off a static object, the frequency of the wave does not change, and so its wave length cannot change as well.
However, a phenomenological explanation of the observations can be given when one assumes that the X-rays are composed of particles, called photons, which carry specific amounts (quanta) of energy
(2) |
and momentum
(3) |
where
(4) |
is the reduced Planck’s constant (Planck’s constant itself is defined as ). Equation (2) is known as the Planck relation, while Eq. (3) is known as the de Broglie relation.
These photons move at a velocity given by the speed of light .
According to the kinematic relations of special relativity,
they hence carry no mass and obey .
The electron has a finite mass and rest energy before the
collision, which changes to after the collision.
From the conservation laws for energy
and momentum it follows11
1
using , , and
that
(5) |
This indeed recovers the experimentally observed change of the wave length.
Points to remember
De-Broglie relation
Planck relation
When small particles (electrons, -particles, or even C ‘bucky balls’) are sent through small slits, they randomly change direction in violation to classical mechanics. Over many experimental runs, one can identify a probability that a particle arrives in a some small region around a point , and this probability looks similar to the intensity distribution of a diffracted wave.
This can be explained by de Broglie’s phenomenological concept of ‘matter waves’
(6) |
where the wave properties are related to the known kinetic
properties of the particle in exactly the same manner as for the
photons — the
angular frequency is and the wave vector is .
The experimentally determined probability is then found to be
proportional to the intensity of the matter wave. We call the wave
function.
Points to remember
All information about the state of a quantum mechanical system is encoded in a wave function, which in the examples above is of the form .
The nature of this information is probabilistic. E.g., the probability density of a particle at position is given by .