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Relativity
Einstein’s solution: Two principles

Principle of Relativity:
    All of the laws of physics are the
    same for any two observers
    moving at constant relative speed

Principle of Constancy of Speed of Light:
    All observers see the same speed of light, no matter their relative
    velocities.

       Requires re-thinking of basic physics from the ground up
       Requires re-thinking of nature of time and space
              Time moves at different rates for different observers
Quantum Mechanics
The other great theory of modern physics

     Deals with very small objects
      Electrons, atoms, molecules

Grew out of problems that seemed simple

      Black-body radiation

      Photoelectric Effect

      Atomic Spectra

Produces some very strange results…
Blackbody Radiation
Light emitted by hot object

    Depends only on temperature
    Characteristic spectrum of light
Blackbody Radiation
Max Planck, 1900

   Developed mathematical formula for spectrum




  Problem: Derivation of formula required a mathematical trick

           Introduced idea of “quantum” of energy

           Completely overturned classical physics
Blackbody Model
Imagine object as box with “oscillators” in walls
    Small amount of light leaks out blackbody spectrum
     What radiation exists in box?




         “Standing wave”  integer number of half-wavelengths
                             fit across the length of the box
          Divide thermal energy of object among possible modes
           Add up all allowed modes to get total spectrum
 (Rayleigh-Jeans approach; slightly different than Planck, but simpler)
Standing Waves
Ultraviolet Catastrophe


Problem: Lots and lots of ways to get short wavelengths
         120


                            200 modes, 0.02L bins
                                                                  Predicts huge
         100



         80                                                      amount of light at very
                                                                 short wavelengths
Number




         60



         40



         20



          0
               0.0   0.2      0.4          0.6       0.8   1.0
                           Wavelength (box length)
Quantum Hypothesis


Planck’s trick:
       Each mode has a minimum energy depending on frequency
      Can only contain an integer multiple of fundamental energy

Modes with very short wavelength would need more than their
      share of thermal energy

    Amount of radiation drops off very sharply at short wavelength
Energy Partition

6 quanta


3 quanta


2 quanta


1 quanta



0 quanta
Blackbody Spectrum
Photoelectric Effect
Shine light on some object,
        electrons come out

Discovered by Heinrich Hertz, 1887


Simple model: Shaking electrons




 Predict:     1) Number of ejected electrons depends on intensity

              2) Energy of ejected electrons depends on intensity

              3) No obvious dependence on frequency
Photoelectric Effect: Experiment
Observations:

    1) Number of electrons
        depends on intensity
    2) Energy of electrons DOES
        NOT depend on intensity

    3) Cut-off frequency:
        minimum frequency to get
        any emission
    4) Above cut-off, energy increases linearly
           with frequency
Photoelectric Effect: Einstein
Einstein, 1905: “Heuristic Model” of PE Effect

    Particle model: “Light quanta” with energy



    Some minimum energy to remove electron:
          “Work Function”

    Energy of emitted electron:



Take’s Planck’s “trick” seriously, runs with the idea
Photoelectric Effect: Einstein
Observations:
    1) Number of electrons depends on intensity

         Higher intensity More quanta
    2) Energy of electrons DOES NOT depend
    on intensity
         Only one photon to eject
    3) Cut-off frequency: minimum frequency
    to get any emission
                                                  Einstein in 1921
                                                  Nobel Prize portrait
    4) Above cut-off, energy increases linearly   Cited for PE Effect
    with frequency
Atomic Spectra




Atoms emit light at discrete, characteristic frequencies
Observed in 1860’s, unexplained until 1913
Bohr Model
1913: Neils Bohr comes up with “solar system” model




    1) Electrons orbit nucleus in certain “allowed states”
    2) Electrons radiate only when moving between allowed states
    3) Frequency of emitted/absorbed light determined by Planck rule

  Works great for hydrogen, but no reason for ad hoc assumptions
Matter Waves
Louis de Broglie: Particles are Waves
    Electrons occupy standing wave orbits
    Orbit allowed only if integral number of
            electron wavelengths




                                                  h
     Wavelength determined by momentum         
                                                  p
                      Same rule as for light…
Matter Waves
 de Broglie Waves:
                               h
                         
                               p

Why don’t we see this?
      Planck’s Constant is tiny
      h = 6.626  10 –34 J-s
                                   More significant for single atoms
      145 g baseball, 40 m/s             87Rb,   200 m/s
             = 1.1  10 –34 m                    = 0.02 nm
 Insignificant for macroscopic objects   Still small, but can
                                            start to see effects
Electron Diffraction
Send electrons at two slits in a barrier:




              Image and video from Hitachi:
              http://www.hitachi.com/rd/research/em/doubleslit.html
Fullerene Diffraction




http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/
File:Fullerene-C60.png




                                     Fig. 7 in the paper, "Quantum interference experiments with large molecules,"
                                     by Nairz, Arndt, and Zeilinger (Am. J. Phys 71, 319 (2003)).
Big Molecules




430 ATOMS
Light as a Clock
Light: Electromagnetic wave

      Extremely regular oscillation

      No moving parts

Use atoms as a reference:




             Performance: Lose 1s in 100,000,000 years

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History of Quantum Mechanics

  • 1. Relativity Einstein’s solution: Two principles Principle of Relativity: All of the laws of physics are the same for any two observers moving at constant relative speed Principle of Constancy of Speed of Light: All observers see the same speed of light, no matter their relative velocities. Requires re-thinking of basic physics from the ground up Requires re-thinking of nature of time and space Time moves at different rates for different observers
  • 2. Quantum Mechanics The other great theory of modern physics Deals with very small objects  Electrons, atoms, molecules Grew out of problems that seemed simple  Black-body radiation  Photoelectric Effect  Atomic Spectra Produces some very strange results…
  • 3. Blackbody Radiation Light emitted by hot object Depends only on temperature Characteristic spectrum of light
  • 4. Blackbody Radiation Max Planck, 1900  Developed mathematical formula for spectrum Problem: Derivation of formula required a mathematical trick Introduced idea of “quantum” of energy Completely overturned classical physics
  • 5. Blackbody Model Imagine object as box with “oscillators” in walls Small amount of light leaks out blackbody spectrum What radiation exists in box? “Standing wave”  integer number of half-wavelengths fit across the length of the box Divide thermal energy of object among possible modes  Add up all allowed modes to get total spectrum (Rayleigh-Jeans approach; slightly different than Planck, but simpler)
  • 7. Ultraviolet Catastrophe Problem: Lots and lots of ways to get short wavelengths 120 200 modes, 0.02L bins  Predicts huge 100 80 amount of light at very short wavelengths Number 60 40 20 0 0.0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0 Wavelength (box length)
  • 8. Quantum Hypothesis Planck’s trick: Each mode has a minimum energy depending on frequency Can only contain an integer multiple of fundamental energy Modes with very short wavelength would need more than their share of thermal energy  Amount of radiation drops off very sharply at short wavelength
  • 9. Energy Partition 6 quanta 3 quanta 2 quanta 1 quanta 0 quanta
  • 11. Photoelectric Effect Shine light on some object, electrons come out Discovered by Heinrich Hertz, 1887 Simple model: Shaking electrons Predict: 1) Number of ejected electrons depends on intensity 2) Energy of ejected electrons depends on intensity 3) No obvious dependence on frequency
  • 12. Photoelectric Effect: Experiment Observations: 1) Number of electrons depends on intensity 2) Energy of electrons DOES NOT depend on intensity 3) Cut-off frequency: minimum frequency to get any emission 4) Above cut-off, energy increases linearly with frequency
  • 13. Photoelectric Effect: Einstein Einstein, 1905: “Heuristic Model” of PE Effect Particle model: “Light quanta” with energy Some minimum energy to remove electron: “Work Function” Energy of emitted electron: Take’s Planck’s “trick” seriously, runs with the idea
  • 14. Photoelectric Effect: Einstein Observations: 1) Number of electrons depends on intensity Higher intensity More quanta 2) Energy of electrons DOES NOT depend on intensity Only one photon to eject 3) Cut-off frequency: minimum frequency to get any emission Einstein in 1921 Nobel Prize portrait 4) Above cut-off, energy increases linearly Cited for PE Effect with frequency
  • 15. Atomic Spectra Atoms emit light at discrete, characteristic frequencies Observed in 1860’s, unexplained until 1913
  • 16. Bohr Model 1913: Neils Bohr comes up with “solar system” model 1) Electrons orbit nucleus in certain “allowed states” 2) Electrons radiate only when moving between allowed states 3) Frequency of emitted/absorbed light determined by Planck rule  Works great for hydrogen, but no reason for ad hoc assumptions
  • 17. Matter Waves Louis de Broglie: Particles are Waves Electrons occupy standing wave orbits Orbit allowed only if integral number of electron wavelengths h Wavelength determined by momentum  p  Same rule as for light…
  • 18. Matter Waves de Broglie Waves: h  p Why don’t we see this? Planck’s Constant is tiny h = 6.626  10 –34 J-s More significant for single atoms 145 g baseball, 40 m/s 87Rb, 200 m/s  = 1.1  10 –34 m  = 0.02 nm Insignificant for macroscopic objects Still small, but can start to see effects
  • 19. Electron Diffraction Send electrons at two slits in a barrier: Image and video from Hitachi: http://www.hitachi.com/rd/research/em/doubleslit.html
  • 20. Fullerene Diffraction http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/ File:Fullerene-C60.png Fig. 7 in the paper, "Quantum interference experiments with large molecules," by Nairz, Arndt, and Zeilinger (Am. J. Phys 71, 319 (2003)).
  • 22. Light as a Clock Light: Electromagnetic wave Extremely regular oscillation No moving parts Use atoms as a reference: Performance: Lose 1s in 100,000,000 years