FAD1022 L45 — Introduction to Quantum Mechanics
This lecture introduces the formal mathematical framework of quantum mechanics, building on the wave-particle duality foundations from previous lectures. Topics span from photon momentum and the Compton effect through de Broglie's matter waves and the Heisenberg uncertainty principle, to the time-independent Schrödinger equation and the particle in a 1D infinite square well.
Lecture File
Lecture 45 - Photon Momentum, Compton Effect, de-Broglie waves and Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle.pdf(28 slides)- Lecturer: Nurul Izzati (NIA)
1. Wave-Particle Duality Recap
Wave-particle duality is the cornerstone of quantum mechanics: all matter and radiation exhibit both wave-like and particle-like behaviour depending on the experimental context.
De Broglie Wavelength
Louis de Broglie (1924) proposed that any particle with momentum $p$ has an associated wavelength:
$$\lambda = \frac{h}{p} = \frac{h}{mv}$$
Where:
- $h = 6.626 \times 10^{-34}$ J·s (Planck's constant)
- $p$ = momentum of the particle
- $m$ = mass, $v$ = velocity
Key Insight: For macroscopic objects (e.g., a 0.1 kg baseball at 40 m/s), $\lambda \approx 1.7 \times 10^{-34}$ m — far too small to detect. For electrons ($m_e = 9.11 \times 10^{-31}$ kg) moving at $10^6$ m/s, $\lambda \approx 7.3 \times 10^{-10}$ m — comparable to atomic dimensions.
Double-Slit Experiment
The double-slit experiment provides direct evidence of wave-particle duality:
- Classical expectation: Particles produce two bands (one per slit)
- Actual result: Even when electrons pass through one at a time, an interference pattern builds up over many detections
- Interpretation: Each particle interferes with itself, behaving as a wave that passes through both slits simultaneously, then collapsing to a point-like detection
Complementarity Principle (Niels Bohr)
The wave and particle aspects of a quantum entity are complementary — both are needed for a complete description, but they cannot be observed simultaneously in a single experiment.
A quantum object exhibits wave behaviour when it is not being "watched" (interference) and particle behaviour when a which-path measurement is made.
2. Wave Functions and Probability Density
The Wave Function $\Psi(x, t)$
In quantum mechanics, the state of a particle is described by a wave function $\Psi(x, t)$, a complex-valued function of position and time. The wave function itself has no direct physical interpretation — it is a mathematical tool.
Probability Density (Born Interpretation)
Max Born (1926) proposed that $|\Psi(x, t)|^2$ gives the probability density of finding the particle at position $x$ at time $t$:
$$P(x, t),dx = |\Psi(x, t)|^2,dx = \Psi^*(x, t)\Psi(x, t),dx$$
Where $\Psi^*$ is the complex conjugate of $\Psi$.
Normalization Condition
Since the particle must be found somewhere in space, the total probability over all space must equal 1:
$$\int_{-\infty}^{\infty} |\Psi(x, t)|^2,dx = 1$$
A wave function satisfying this condition is said to be normalized. This requirement constrains the mathematical form of $\Psi$ and leads directly to quantized energy levels in bound systems.
Properties of Valid Wave Functions
A physically admissible wave function must be:
- Single-valued — one value at each point
- Continuous — no jumps or breaks
- Finite — cannot blow up to infinity
- Square-integrable — $\int_{-\infty}^{\infty} |\Psi|^2,dx$ must be finite
3. Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle
Werner Heisenberg (1927) showed that certain pairs of physical quantities cannot be simultaneously known with arbitrary precision.
Position-Momentum Uncertainty
$$\Delta x \cdot \Delta p \geq \frac{\hbar}{2}$$
Where:
- $\Delta x$ = uncertainty in position
- $\Delta p$ = uncertainty in momentum
- $\hbar = h/2\pi = 1.0546 \times 10^{-34}$ J·s (reduced Planck constant)
Energy-Time Uncertainty
$$\Delta E \cdot \Delta t \geq \frac{\hbar}{2}$$
Where:
- $\Delta E$ = uncertainty in energy
- $\Delta t$ = uncertainty in time / lifetime of a state
Physical Meaning
The uncertainty principle is not a measurement limitation — it is a fundamental property of nature:
- If you confine a particle to a very small region (small $\Delta x$), its momentum becomes highly uncertain (large $\Delta p$)
- Short-lived quantum states have inherently uncertain energies
- This is why electrons in atoms do not spiral into the nucleus: confining an electron to the nuclear volume would give it enormous momentum uncertainty and thus enormous kinetic energy
Example — Electron Confinement
For an electron confined to $\Delta x = 10^{-10}$ m (atomic size): $$\Delta p \geq \frac{\hbar}{2\Delta x} = \frac{1.0546 \times 10^{-34}}{2 \times 10^{-10}} \approx 5.27 \times 10^{-25}\text{ kg·m/s}$$
$$\Delta v \geq \frac{\Delta p}{m_e} \approx 5.8 \times 10^5\text{ m/s}$$
This minimum velocity is comparable to the orbital velocity in hydrogen, confirming that quantum uncertainty governs atomic structure.
4. Time-Independent Schrödinger Equation (TISE)
The Wave Equation for Matter
Erwin Schrödinger (1926) proposed a wave equation governing the evolution of the wave function. The full time-dependent Schrödinger equation is:
$$i\hbar\frac{\partial\Psi(x,t)}{\partial t} = -\frac{\hbar^2}{2m}\frac{\partial^2\Psi(x,t)}{\partial x^2} + V(x)\Psi(x,t)$$
Separation of Variables
For a time-independent potential $V(x)$, we can separate the wave function:
$$\Psi(x, t) = \psi(x) \cdot e^{-iEt/\hbar}$$
Substituting into the time-dependent equation yields the Time-Independent Schrödinger Equation (TISE):
$$-\frac{\hbar^2}{2m}\frac{d^2\psi(x)}{dx^2} + V(x)\psi(x) = E\psi(x)$$
Hamiltonian Form
The TISE can be written compactly using the Hamiltonian operator $\hat{H}$:
$$\hat{H}\psi(x) = E\psi(x)$$
Where $\hat{H} = -\frac{\hbar^2}{2m}\frac{d^2}{dx^2} + V(x)$
This is an eigenvalue equation: $\psi(x)$ is the eigenfunction and $E$ is the eigenvalue (the allowed energy). Only certain values of $E$ yield physically acceptable solutions — this is the origin of energy quantization.
Terms in the TISE
| Term | Symbol | Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| Kinetic energy operator | $-\frac{\hbar^2}{2m}\frac{d^2}{dx^2}$ | From de Broglie relation $p = \hbar k$ |
| Potential energy | $V(x)$ | Depends on the physical situation |
| Energy eigenvalue | $E$ | Allowed energy of the state |
| Wave function | $\psi(x)$ | Spatial part of the full wave function |
Additional Examples from Lecture Slides
Example — De Broglie Wavelength of an Electron
Calculate the de Broglie wavelength of an electron moving at $2.0 \times 10^6$ m/s.
$$\lambda = \frac{h}{mv} = \frac{6.63 \times 10^{-34}}{(9.11 \times 10^{-31})(2.0 \times 10^6)} = \boxed{3.63 \times 10^{-10} \text{ m}}$$
Example — De Broglie Wavelength from Kinetic Energy
Calculate the de Broglie wavelength of an electron with kinetic energy of 150 eV.
Step 1: Convert eV to joules $$KE = 150 \text{ eV} = 150 \times 1.602 \times 10^{-19} = 2.403 \times 10^{-17} \text{ J}$$
Step 2: Use formula $\lambda = \frac{h}{\sqrt{2mKE}}$
$$\lambda = \frac{6.626 \times 10^{-34}}{\sqrt{2(9.11 \times 10^{-31})(2.403 \times 10^{-17})}} = \frac{6.626 \times 10^{-34}}{6.62 \times 10^{-24}} \approx \boxed{1.00 \times 10^{-10} \text{ m} = 0.1 \text{ nm}}$$
This is within the atomic scale — explaining electron diffraction.
Example — Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle
Case 1 (Macroscopic): A pitcher throws a 0.1-kg baseball at 40 m/s. Momentum is $0.1 \times 40 = 4$ kg·m/s. Suppose the momentum is measured to an accuracy of 1%, i.e., $\Delta p = 0.01p = 4 \times 10^{-2}$ kg·m/s.
$$\Delta x \geq \frac{h}{4\pi \Delta p} = 1.3 \times 10^{-33} \text{ m}$$
No wonder one does not observe the effects of the uncertainty principle in everyday life!
Case 2 (Microscopic): Same situation, but baseball replaced by an electron ($m = 9.11 \times 10^{-31}$ kg) moving at $4 \times 10^6$ m/s.
$$p = 3.6 \times 10^{-24} \text{ kg·m/s}, \quad \Delta p = 3.6 \times 10^{-26} \text{ kg·m/s}$$
$$\Delta x \geq \frac{h}{4\pi \Delta p} = \boxed{1.4 \times 10^{-4} \text{ m}}$$
This is a macroscopic uncertainty — 0.14 mm — showing that quantum effects are significant for electrons.
5. Particle in a 1D Box (Infinite Square Well)
The simplest non-trivial quantum system: a particle of mass $m$ confined to a one-dimensional region $0 < x < L$ by infinitely high potential walls.
Potential Definition
$$V(x) = \begin{cases} 0 & \text{for } 0 < x < L \ \infty & \text{for } x \leq 0 \text{ or } x \geq L \end{cases}$$
Boundary Conditions
Since the potential is infinite outside the box, the wave function must be zero at the walls:
$$\psi(0) = 0, \quad \psi(L) = 0$$
Solving the TISE Inside the Box
For $0 < x < L$, $V = 0$, so the TISE becomes:
$$-\frac{\hbar^2}{2m}\frac{d^2\psi}{dx^2} = E\psi$$
The general solution is $\psi(x) = A\sin(kx) + B\cos(kx)$ where $k = \sqrt{2mE}/\hbar$.
Applying $\psi(0) = 0$ forces $B = 0$, so $\psi(x) = A\sin(kx)$.
Applying $\psi(L) = 0$ gives $\sin(kL) = 0$, which requires $kL = n\pi$ for $n = 1, 2, 3, \ldots$
Energy Quantization
From $k_n = n\pi/L$ and $k = \sqrt{2mE}/\hbar$:
$$E_n = \frac{\hbar^2 k_n^2}{2m} = \frac{\hbar^2 \pi^2 n^2}{2mL^2} = \frac{n^2 h^2}{8mL^2}$$
Where $n = 1, 2, 3, \ldots$ is the quantum number.
Key properties:
- Energy is quantized — only discrete values are allowed
- $E_n \propto n^2$ — energy spacing increases with $n$
- Zero-point energy: $E_1 = h^2/(8mL^2) > 0$ — the particle can never be at rest ($n=0$ is forbidden by the uncertainty principle)
- As $L$ increases, energy levels become closer together, approaching a classical continuum
Normalized Wave Functions
Applying the normalization condition $\int_0^L |\psi_n(x)|^2,dx = 1$:
$$\psi_n(x) = \sqrt{\frac{2}{L}}\sin\left(\frac{n\pi x}{L}\right), \quad n = 1, 2, 3, \ldots$$
Nodes
Each wave function $\psi_n(x)$ has $(n-1)$ nodes — points inside the box where $\psi_n = 0$ (excluding the walls). The probability of finding the particle at a node is zero.
| $n$ | Nodes inside box | Shape description |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | 0 | Half sine wave (ground state) |
| 2 | 1 | Full sine wave (first excited state) |
| 3 | 2 | 1.5 sine waves |
| 4 | 3 | 2 full sine waves |
Probability Distributions
The probability density for state $n$ is:
$$|\psi_n(x)|^2 = \frac{2}{L}\sin^2\left(\frac{n\pi x}{L}\right)$$
For the ground state ($n=1$), the particle is most likely found near the centre of the box. For higher $n$, the probability distribution shows multiple peaks, approaching the classical uniform distribution as $n \to \infty$ (Bohr's correspondence principle).
Worked Example 1 — Electron in a Box
An electron is confined in a 1D box of length $L = 1.0 \times 10^{-10}$ m (approximately atomic size). Find: (a) The ground state energy $E_1$ (b) The wavelength of a photon emitted when the electron transitions from $n=3$ to $n=1$
Solution (a): $$E_1 = \frac{h^2}{8mL^2} = \frac{(6.626 \times 10^{-34})^2}{8(9.11 \times 10^{-31})(1.0 \times 10^{-10})^2}$$ $$E_1 = \frac{4.39 \times 10^{-67}}{7.29 \times 10^{-50}} = 6.02 \times 10^{-18}\text{ J} = 37.6\text{ eV}$$
Solution (b): $$E_3 = 9E_1 = 9(6.02 \times 10^{-18}) = 5.42 \times 10^{-17}\text{ J}$$ $$\Delta E = E_3 - E_1 = 5.42 \times 10^{-17} - 6.02 \times 10^{-18} = 4.82 \times 10^{-17}\text{ J}$$ $$\lambda = \frac{hc}{\Delta E} = \frac{(6.626 \times 10^{-34})(3.0 \times 10^8)}{4.82 \times 10^{-17}} = 4.12 \times 10^{-9}\text{ m} = 4.12\text{ nm}$$
This wavelength is in the X-ray region of the electromagnetic spectrum.
Worked Example 2 — Proton in a Box
A proton ($m_p = 1.67 \times 10^{-27}$ kg) is confined in a 1D box of length $L = 1.0 \times 10^{-15}$ m (nuclear dimensions). Find the ground state energy.
$$E_1 = \frac{h^2}{8mL^2} = \frac{(6.626 \times 10^{-34})^2}{8(1.67 \times 10^{-27})(1.0 \times 10^{-15})^2}$$ $$E_1 = \frac{4.39 \times 10^{-67}}{1.34 \times 10^{-56}} = 3.28 \times 10^{-11}\text{ J} \approx 205\text{ MeV}$$
This enormous energy scale (MeV range) is why nuclear processes involve such high energies.
6. Energy Quantization — Classical vs Quantum
Why is Energy Discrete at Quantum Scales?
The TISE is a differential equation with boundary conditions, similar to a standing wave on a string. Only specific wavelengths — and therefore specific energies — can satisfy the boundary conditions. This is the mathematical origin of quantization.
Contrast Between Classical and Quantum
| Property | Classical Physics | Quantum Mechanics |
|---|---|---|
| Energy | Continuous (any value) | Discrete (quantized) at small scales |
| Position | Definite trajectory $x(t)$ | Probability distribution $ |
| Momentum | Definite $p = mv$ | Uncertain; $\Delta x\Delta p \geq \hbar/2$ |
| State | Determined by $x$ and $p$ | Determined by wave function $\psi$ |
| Measurement | Passive observation | Affects the system (wave function collapse) |
| Causality | Deterministic | Probabilistic |
When Does Classical Physics Recover?
As the quantum number $n$ becomes large, the energy spacing relative to the energy becomes small:
$$\frac{E_{n+1} - E_n}{E_n} = \frac{(n+1)^2 - n^2}{n^2} = \frac{2n+1}{n^2} \approx \frac{2}{n} \to 0 \text{ as } n \to \infty$$
This is Bohr's Correspondence Principle: quantum mechanics approaches classical mechanics in the limit of large quantum numbers.
Zero-Point Energy
Even in the lowest energy state ($n=1$), the particle has non-zero energy ($E_1 > 0$). This is a direct consequence of the uncertainty principle:
- Confining the particle to the box gives it a minimum $\Delta x \approx L$
- The uncertainty principle then requires a minimum $\Delta p \approx \hbar/L$
- This minimum momentum implies a minimum kinetic energy
Classically, a particle could be at rest ($E=0$) inside the box. Quantum mechanically, this is impossible.
Key Equations Summary
| Equation | Description |
|---|---|
| $\lambda = h/p$ | De Broglie wavelength |
| $P(x) = | \Psi(x,t) |
| $\int_{-\infty}^{\infty} | \Psi |
| $\Delta x \cdot \Delta p \geq \hbar/2$ | Heisenberg uncertainty (position-momentum) |
| $\Delta E \cdot \Delta t \geq \hbar/2$ | Heisenberg uncertainty (energy-time) |
| $-\frac{\hbar^2}{2m}\frac{d^2\psi}{dx^2} + V\psi = E\psi$ | Time-Independent Schrödinger Equation |
| $\hat{H}\psi = E\psi$ | TISE in operator form |
| $E_n = \frac{n^2 h^2}{8mL^2}$ | Particle in 1D box energy |
| $\psi_n(x) = \sqrt{\frac{2}{L}}\sin\left(\frac{n\pi x}{L}\right)$ | Particle in 1D box wave function |
Related Concepts
- Modern Physics — Wave-Particle Duality — foundational principle
- Quantum Mechanics — concept page
- Atomic Physics — quantum mechanics applied to atoms
- Photoelectric Effect — experimental evidence for quantum nature
- Photons — quantum of electromagnetic radiation
Previous Lecture
- FAD1022 L44 — Photons and Photoelectric Effect — photon properties, photoelectric equation
Lecturer
Nurul Izzati (NIA) — PASUM Physics Lecturer
Related
- FAD1022 - Basic Physics II — main course page