Wave packet
In physics, a wave packet (also known as a wave train or wave group) is a short burst of localized wave action that travels as a unit, outlined by an envelope. A wave packet can be analyzed into, or can be synthesized from, a potentially-infinite set of component sinusoidal waves of different wavenumbers, with phases and amplitudes such that they interfere constructively only over a small region of space, and destructively elsewhere.[1] Any signal of a limited width in time or space requires many frequency components around a center frequency within a bandwidth inversely proportional to that width; even a gaussian function is considered a wave packet because its Fourier transform is a "packet" of waves of frequencies clustered around a central frequency.[2] Each component wave function, and hence the wave packet, are solutions of a wave equation. Depending on the wave equation, the wave packet's profile may remain constant (no dispersion) or it may change (dispersion) while propagating.
Historical background
[edit]Ideas related to wave packets – modulation, carrier waves, phase velocity, and group velocity – date from the mid-1800s. The idea of a group velocity distinct from a wave's phase velocity was first proposed by W.R. Hamilton in 1839, and the first full treatment was by Rayleigh in his "Theory of Sound" in 1877.[3]
Erwin Schrödinger introduced the idea of wave packets just after publishing his famous wave equation.[4] He solved his wave equation for a quantum harmonic oscillator, introduced the superposition principle, and used it to show that a compact state could persist. While this work did result in the important concept of coherent states, the wave packet concept did not endure. The year after Schrödinger's paper, Werner Heisenberg published his paper on the uncertainty principle, showing in the process, that Schrödinger's results only applied to quantum harmonic oscillators, not for example to Coulomb potential characteristic of atoms.[4]: 829
The following year, 1927, Charles Galton Darwin explored Schrödinger's equation for an unbound electron in free space, assuming an initial Gaussian wave packet.[5] Darwin showed that at time later the position of the packet traveling at velocity would be
where is the uncertainty in the initial position.
Later in 1927 Paul Ehrenfest showed that the time, for a matter wave packet of width and mass to spread by a factor of 2 was . Since is so small, wave packets on the scale of macroscopic objects, with large width and mass, double only at cosmic time scales.[6]: 49
Significance in quantum mechanics
[edit]Quantum mechanics describes the nature of atomic and subatomic systems using Schrödinger's wave equation. The classical limit of quantum mechanics and many formulations of quantum scattering use wave packets formed from various solutions to this equation. Quantum wave packet profiles change while propagating; they show dispersion. Physicists have concluded that "wave packets would not do as representations of subatomic particles".[4]: 829
Wave packets and the classical limit
[edit]Schrodinger developed wave packets in hopes of interpreting quantum wave solutions as locally compact wave groups.[4] Such packets tradeoff position localization for spreading momentum. In the coordinate representation of the wave (such as the Cartesian coordinate system), the position of the particle's localized probability is specified by the position of the packet solution. The narrower the spatial wave packet, and therefore the better localized the position of the wave packet, the larger the spread in the momentum of the wave. This trade-off between spread in position and spread in momentum is a characteristic feature of the Heisenberg uncertainty principle.
One kind of optimal tradeoff minimizes the product of position uncertainty and momentum uncertainty .[7]: 60 If we place such a packet at rest it stays at rest: the average value of the position and momentum match a classical particle. However it spreads out in all directions with a velocity given by the optimal momentum uncertainty . The spread is so fast that in the distance of once around an atom the wave packet is unrecognizable.
Wave packets and quantum scattering
[edit]Particle interactions are called scattering in physics; the wave packet concept plays an important role in quantum scattering approaches. A monochromatic (single momentum) source produces convergence difficulties in the scattering models.[8]: 150 Scattering problems also have classical limits. Whenever the scattering target (for example an atom) has a size much smaller than wave packet, the center of the wave packet follows scattering classical trajectories. In other cases, the wave packet distorts and scatters as it interacts with the target.[9]: 295
Basic behaviors
[edit]This section needs additional citations for verification. (October 2024) |
Non-dispersive
[edit]Without dispersion the wave packet maintains its shape as it propagates. As an example of propagation without dispersion, consider wave solutions to the following wave equation from classical physics
where c is the speed of the wave's propagation in a given medium.
Using the physics time convention, e−iωt, the wave equation has plane-wave solutions
where the relation between the angular frequency ω and angular wave vector k is given by the dispersion relation: such that . This relation should be valid so that the plane wave is a solution to the wave equation. As the relation is linear, the wave equation is said to be non-dispersive.
To simplify, consider the one-dimensional wave equation with ω(k) = ±kc. Then the general solution is where the first and second term represent a wave propagating in the positive respectively negative x-direction.
A wave packet is a localized disturbance that results from the sum of many different wave forms. If the packet is strongly localized, more frequencies are needed to allow the constructive superposition in the region of localization and destructive superposition outside the region.[10] From the basic one-dimensional plane-wave solutions, a general form of a wave packet can be expressed as where the amplitude A(k), containing the coefficients of the wave superposition, follows from taking the inverse Fourier transform of a "sufficiently nice" initial wave u(x, t) evaluated at t = 0: and comes from Fourier transform conventions.
For example, choosing
we obtain
and finally
The nondispersive propagation of the real or imaginary part of this wave packet is presented in the above animation.
Dispersive
[edit]By contrast, in the case of dispersion, a wave changes shape during propagation. For example, the free Schrödinger equation , has plane-wave solutions of the form: where is a constant and the dispersion relation satisfies[11][12] with the subscripts denoting unit vector notation. As the dispersion relation is non-linear, the free Schrödinger equation is dispersive.
In this case, the wave packet is given by: where once again is simply the Fourier transform of . If (and therefore ) is a Gaussian function, the wave packet is called a Gaussian wave packet.[13]
For example, the solution to the one-dimensional free Schrödinger equation (with 2Δx, m, and ħ set equal to one) satisfying the initial condition representing a wave packet localized in space at the origin as a Gaussian function, is seen to be
An impression of the dispersive behavior of this wave packet is obtained by looking at the probability density: It is evident that this dispersive wave packet, while moving with constant group velocity ko, is delocalizing rapidly: it has a width increasing with time as √ 1 + 4t2 → 2t, so eventually it diffuses to an unlimited region of space.
Gaussian wave packets in quantum mechanics
[edit]The above dispersive Gaussian wave packet, unnormalized and just centered at the origin, instead, at t=0, can now be written in 3D, now in standard units:[14][15] The Fourier transform is also a Gaussian in terms of the wavenumber, the k-vector, With a and its inverse adhering to the uncertainty relation such that can be considered the square of the width of the wave packet, whereas its inverse can be written as
Each separate wave only phase-rotates in time, so that the time dependent Fourier-transformed solution is
The inverse Fourier transform is still a Gaussian, but now the parameter a has become complex, and there is an overall normalization factor.
The integral of Ψ over all space is invariant, because it is the inner product of Ψ with the state of zero energy, which is a wave with infinite wavelength, a constant function of space. For any energy eigenstate η(x), the inner product, only changes in time in a simple way: its phase rotates with a frequency determined by the energy of η. When η has zero energy, like the infinite wavelength wave, it doesn't change at all.
For a given , the phase of the wave function varies with position as . It varies quadratically with position, which means that it is different from multiplication by a linear phase factor as is the case of imparting a constant momentum to the wave packet. In general, the phase of a gaussian wave packet has both a linear term and a quadratic term. The coefficient of the quadratic term begins by increasing from towards as the gaussian wave packet becomes sharper, then at the moment of maximum sharpness, the phase of the wave function varies linearly with position. Then the coefficient of the quadratic term increases from towards , as the gaussian wave packet spreads out again.
The integral ∫ |Ψ|2d3r is also invariant, which is a statement of the conservation of probability.[16] Explicitly, where r is the distance from the origin, the speed of the particle is zero, and width given by which is √a at (arbitrarily chosen) time t = 0 while eventually growing linearly in time, as ħt/(m√a), indicating wave-packet spreading.[17]
For example, if an electron wave packet is initially localized in a region of atomic dimensions (i.e., 10−10 m) then the width of the packet doubles in about 10−16 s. Clearly, particle wave packets spread out very rapidly indeed (in free space):[18] For instance, after 1 ms, the width will have grown to about a kilometer.
This linear growth is a reflection of the (time-invariant) momentum uncertainty: the wave packet is confined to a narrow Δx = √a/2, and so has a momentum which is uncertain (according to the uncertainty principle) by the amount ħ/√2a, a spread in velocity of ħ/m√2a, and thus in the future position by ħt /m√2a. The uncertainty relation is then a strict inequality, very far from saturation, indeed! The initial uncertainty ΔxΔp = ħ/2 has now increased by a factor of ħt/ma (for large t).