Chapter 15: Duality of Matter Did you read chapter 15 before coming to class? A.Yes B.No.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The 4 important interactions of photons
Advertisements

Physics and the Quantum Mechanical Model Section 13.3
Wave Particle Duality – Light and Subatomic Particles
Cutnell/Johnson Physics 7th edition
Ch 9 pages ; Lecture 20 – Particle and Waves.
The photon, the quantum of light
Actually, we need not speak of particles at all. For many experiments it is more convenient to speak of matter waves... The two pictures are of course.
The de Broglie Wavelength Lesson 11. Review Remember that it has been proven that waves can occasionally act as particles. (ie: photons are particles.
Dr hab. EWA POPKO Room 231a, A-1 Modern Physics.
Electromagnetic Radiation
The Electronic Structures of Atoms Electromagnetic Radiation
Pre-IB/Pre-AP CHEMISTRY
Review of Models  Continuous  Molecular  Thompson  Nuclear Solar System  Bohr Model The problems with the Bohr/solar-system model of the atom: Why.
Phys 102 – Lecture 24 The classical and Bohr atom 1.
P2-13: ELECTRON DIFFRACTION P3-51: BALMER SERIES P2-15: WAVE PACKETS – OSCILLATORS P2-12: X-RAY DIFFRACTION MODEL P2-11: INTERFERENCE OF PHOTONS Lecture.
The Photoelectric Effect
Lecture 2210/26/05. Moving between energy levels.
Successes of the Bohr model Explains the Balmer formula and predicts the empirical constant R using fundamental constants: Explains the spectrum for other.
Quantum Mechanics  Bohr’s theory established the concept of atomic energy levels but did not thoroughly explain the “wave-like” behavior of the electron.
Quantum Theory of the Atom
Classical ConceptsEquations Newton’s Law Kinetic Energy Momentum Momentum and Energy Speed of light Velocity of a wave Angular Frequency Einstein’s Mass-Energy.
Quantum Mechanics. What is Quantum Physics? Quantum physics takes into account every possible outcome of measurement of physical properties  Quantum.
The Quantum Model of the Atom Part 1 Electrons as Waves.
Electromagnetic Spectrum Light as a Wave - Recap Light exhibits several wavelike properties including Refraction Refraction: Light bends upon passing.
Atomic Particles  Atoms are made of protons, neutrons and electrons  % of the atom is empty space  Electrons have locations described.
Quantum Theory Chapter 5. Lecture Objectives Indicate what is meant by the duality of matter. Indicate what is meant by the duality of matter. Discuss.
© 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Conceptual Physics 11 th Edition Chapter 31: LIGHT QUANTA.
Chapter 29 Particles and Waves.
As an object gets hot, it gives Off energy in the form of Electromagnetic radiation.
Quantum Physics. Quantum Theory Max Planck, examining heat radiation (ir light) proposes energy is quantized, or occurring in discrete small packets with.
Leading up to the Quantum Theory.  exhibits wavelike behavior  moves at a speed 3.8 × 10 8 m/s in a vacuum  there are measureable properties of light.
Atomic Models Scientist studying the atom quickly determined that protons and neutrons are found in the nucleus of an atom. The location and arrangement.
Electrons in Atoms Chapter 5. Duality of Light Einstein proved that matter and energy are related E = mc 2 Einstein proved that matter and energy are.
Chemistry is in the electrons Electronic structure – how the electrons are arranged inside the atom Two parameters: –Energy –Position.
1 Chapter 7 Atomic Structure. 2 Light n Made up of electromagnetic radiation n Waves of electric and magnetic fields at right angles to each other.
Wave-Particle Duality - the Principle of Complementarity The principle of complementarity states that both the wave and particle aspects of light are fundamental.
DUALITY PARTICLE WAVE PARTICLE DUALITY WAVE © John Parkinson.
Quantum Theory the modern atomic model. Bohr Model of the Atom a quantum model proposed by Niels Bohr in 1913 It helped to explain why the atomic emission.
Slide 1 of 38 chemistry. Slide 2 of 38 © Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall Physics and the Quantum Mechanical Model > Light The amplitude of a wave is the.
Chapter 7 Lecture Lecture Presentation Chapter 7 The Quantum- Mechanical Model of the Atom Sherril Soman Grand Valley State University © 2014 Pearson Education,
Classical ConceptsEquations Newton’s Law Kinetic Energy Momentum Momentum and Energy Speed of light Velocity of a wave Angular Frequency Einstein’s Mass-Energy.
The Quantum Atom Weirder and Weirder. Wave-Particle Duality Louis de Broglie ( )‏
1 1.Diffraction of light –Light diffracts when it passes the edge of a barrier or passes through a slit. The diffraction of light through a single slit.
The Dilemma  Particles have mass and a specific position in space (matter)  Waves have NO mass and NO specific position in space (light and energy)
Light and Energy Electromagnetic Radiation is a form of energy that emits wave-like behavior as it travels through space. Examples: Visible Light Microwaves.
The Quantum Model of the Atom CP Chemistry. Louie de Broglie Proposed that all particles of matter that move exhibit wave like behavior (even a baseball!)
Chapter 5 “Electrons in Atoms”. Section 5.3 Physics and the Quantum Mechanical Model l OBJECTIVES: Describe the relationship between the wavelength and.
Physics 213 General Physics Lecture Exam 3 Results Average = 141 points.
Chemistry I Chapter 4 Arrangement of Electrons. Electromagnetic Radiation Energy that exhibits wavelike behavior and travels through space Moves at the.
Modern Model of the Atom The emission of light is fundamentally related to the behavior of electrons.
Principles of Quantum Mechanics What is Quantum Mechanics? QM is the theory of the behavior of very small objects (e.g. molecules, atoms, nuclei, elementary.
The Quantum Mechanical Model Chemistry Honors. The Bohr model was inadequate.
(b) = 0.18 cm In this case the wavelength is significant. While the De Broglie equation applies to all systems, the wave properties become observable only.
Chapter 7: The Quantum-Mechanical Model of the Atom ( )
Postulates of Bohr model
Physics 4 – April 27, 2017 P3 Challenge –
5. Wave-Particle Duality - the Principle of Complementarity
Electromagnetic Radiation
Chapter 6 Electronic Structure of Atoms
Where do these spectral lines come from?
Postulates of Bohr model
CHAPTER 4 Electron Configurations (current model of the atom)
Quantum Mechanics the world is weird.
The de Broglie Wavelength
Bohr Model of the Atom Why are the emission spectra of elements not a continuous spectrum? In 1913, a Danish physicist named Niels Bohr tried to discover.
Conceptual Physics 11th Edition
Light and Energy Electromagnetic Radiation is a form of energy that is created through the interaction of electrical and magnetic fields. It displays wave-like.
5. Wave-Particle Duality - the Principle of Complementarity
Electron Configurations
CHAPTER 4 Electron Configurations (current model of the atom)
Presentation transcript:

Chapter 15: Duality of Matter Did you read chapter 15 before coming to class? A.Yes B.No

Review: How the Bohr model explains the Hydrogen Atom spectrum Energy Level Diagram Absorption Emission

An atom has only the following possible energy levels. How many discrete colors can it emit? E4E4 E3E3 E1E1 E2E2 A.2 B.4 C.5 D.6 E.7 or more

The “bullets” used by Rutherford to probe gold atoms were: A.Electrons B.Neutrons C.Positively charged particles

Matter Models (continued…)  At least two puzzles remain at this point: The wave-particle duality of light. The physical basis for the Bohr model.

The de Broglie Hypothesis was originally hailed as the “French Comedy”…  In 1923 a graduate student named Louis de Broglie proposed a radical idea about matter: In addition to light, matter should also exhibit a wave-particle duality.  A particle of mass should have a wavelength defined by: wavelength = h / (mass × speed) where h = Plank’s constant = 6 x

But it turned out to describe what we observe. Nobel Prize, 1929  De Broglie’s idea explained the Bohr orbitals  The quantized orbits of the Bohr model are predicted perfectly by requiring electrons to exactly wrap 1, 2, 3, etc waves around the nucleus.

Examples Wavelength = m (nonsense?) Wavelength = m (again nonsense?) Wavelength = m Diameter of an atom… 60 mph 100 mph - 2,000 mph wavelength = h / (mass×speed) where h = Plank’s constant = 6 x

Why don’t we observe the wave nature of matter?  To observe wave effects, your “slits” need to be similar to the wavelength  Example: It would take years for a student to “diffract” through a doorway.  For all material objects except the very least massive (such as electrons and protons), the wavelength is so immeasurably small that it can be completely ignored. wavelength = h / (mass×speed) h = 6 x

But are electrons really waves?  Let’s see if they diffract. We need slits about the size of the electron wavelength (~ m) to witness it.  How do you make a slit that small? You can’t manufacture one, but nature provides something we can use: the space between atoms in a crystal.  Fire an electron beam at a crystal and we DO get diffraction and interference patterns! Electrons ARE waves!

Small electron wavelength is useful in electron microscopes  Diffraction limits how small you can see with an optical microscope When objects are about the size of the wavelength of light, light diffracts around the object so you can’t get a clear image.  Electron wavelengths can be 1/1000 th the size of optical wavelengths. So using electron beams we can “see” things 1000 times smaller with the same clarity.

The concept of a probability distribution

For waves, we can use the amplitude as a measure of where the wave “is”

Experimental double slit experiment using electrons  Electrons are detected like particles, but the places that they are detected show interference patterns.  This is essentially the same behavior we observed with photons!

So, which slit does the electron go through? Electron Detector

The results depend on how and what we measure.  Don’t measure which hole the electron goes through  wave-like behavior.  Do measure which hole the electron goes through  particle-like behavior.  How the electron behaves depends on whether it is observed. Deep thought: How does one study an unobserved electron.  We have found the truth; and the truth makes no sense. (G. K. Chesterton)

So what is waving?  The mass of the particle is not spread out and mechanically oscillating.  The “wave” is interpreted as being the probability of locating the particle. High amplitude corresponds to high probability of detection.  It propagates like a pure wave with diffraction, interference, refraction, etc.  Somehow electrons “know” about the existence of both slits even when we cannot prove that they ever go through more than one slit at a time.  Clearly we need another model.

Schodinger’s wave mechanics  I don't like it and I'm sorry I ever had anything to do with it.

The electron position is described with a probability wave  When we measure the position, we find it at a certain position. We refer to this as the collapse of the wave function.

The Uncertainty Principle and waves  To find the trajectory of a particle we must know its position and velocity at the same time.  How do you locate the position of a wave/particle electron?  A well-defined momentum has a well-defined wavelength according to De Broglie. wavelength = h / momentum  To find the trajectory of a particle we must know its position and velocity at the same time.  How do you locate the position of a wave/particle electron?  A well-defined momentum has a well-defined wavelength according to De Broglie. wavelength = h / momentum Pure sine wave  unclear position but clear wavelength (momentum). Sharp pulse  clear position but unclear wavelength (momentum).

Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle  Electrons: fuzzy position and fuzzy wave properties.  The uncertainty in position times the uncertainty in momentum (mass x velocity) is greater than Planck’s constant. Or ∆x ∆(mv) > h

Consequences  If we try to find out where an electron is, we know less about where it is going. Measuring position more accurately makes uncertainty in momentum larger. This is an alternative explanation for electron diffraction.

Philosophical shift in wave mechanics  We could predict this interaction perfectly using Newton’s Laws of motion.  We cannot predict the results of this interaction perfectly in quantum mechanics. We can only give probabilities that certain outcomes will happen. 8 ? ? ? ?

So does the electron “know” where it is and where it is going?  Quantum mechanics experiments demonstrate that there is fundamental uncertainty in nature.  It is not a matter of the experimentalist not being clever enough to measure both position and momentum at the same time. A particle simply cannot have an exact position and an exact momentum at the same time.

I hope this bothers you some… I remember discussions with Bohr which went through many hours till very late at night and ended almost in despair; and when at the end of the discussion I went alone for a walk in the neighboring park I repeated to myself again and again the question: Can nature possibly be as absurd as it seemed to us in these atomic experiments? ~Werner Heisenberg