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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.

A looped animation of a wave packet propagating without dispersion.

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.[4]: 830 

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  .[6]: 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; wave packet mathematics play an important role in quantum scattering approaches. A monochromatic (single momentum) source produces convergence difficulties in the scattering models.[7]: 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.[8]: 295 

Basic behaviors edit

Non-dispersive edit

 
A wave packet without dispersion (real or imaginary part)

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, eiωt, the wave equation has plane-wave solutions

 

where

 
and  

This relation between ω and k should be valid so that the plane wave is a solution to the wave equation. It is called a dispersion relation.

To simplify, consider only waves propagating in one dimension (extension to three dimensions is straightforward). Then the general solution is

 
in which we may take ω = kc. The first term represents a wave propagating in the positive x-direction since it is a function of x ct only; the second term, being a function of x + ct, represents a wave propagating in the 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. From the basic solutions in one dimension, a general form of a wave packet can be expressed as

 

As in the plane-wave case the wave packet travels to the right for ω(k) = kc, since u(x, t) = F(xct), and to the left for ω(k) = −kc, since u(x, t) = F(x + ct).

The factor   comes from Fourier transform conventions. The amplitude A(k) contains the coefficients of the linear superposition of the plane-wave solutions. These coefficients can in turn be expressed as a function of u(x, t) evaluated at t = 0 by inverting the Fourier transform relation above:

 

For instance, 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

 
A wave packet with dispersion. Notice the wave spreads out and its amplitude reduces.
 
Position space probability density of an initially Gaussian state moving in one dimension at minimally uncertain, constant momentum in free space.

By contrast, as an example of dispersion where a wave changes shape during propagation, consider instead solutions to the Schrödinger equation (nondimensionalized with x, m, and ħ set equal to one),

 
yielding the dispersion relation
 

Once again, restricting attention to one dimension, the solution to the Schrödinger equation satisfying the initial condition  , representing a wave packet localized in space at the origin, 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.[nb 1]

The momentum profile A(k) remains invariant. The probability current is

 

Gaussian wave packets in quantum mechanics edit

 
Superposition of 1D plane waves (blue) that sum to form a Gaussian wave packet (red) that propagates to the right while spreading. Blue dots follow each plane wave's phase velocity while the red line follows the central group velocity.
 
1D Gaussian wave packet, shown in the complex plane, for a=2 and k=4

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:[9][10]

 
where a is a positive real number, the square of the width of the wave packet,
 

The Fourier transform is also a Gaussian in terms of the wavenumber, the k-vector, (with inverse width,

 
so that
 
i.e., it satisfies the uncertainty relation),
 

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.[6]

 

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.

The integral ∫ |Ψ|2d3r is also invariant, which is a statement of the conservation of probability. Explicitly,

 

in which a is the width of P(r) at t = 0; r is the distance from the origin; the speed of the particle is zero; and the time origin t = 0 can be chosen arbitrarily.

The width of the Gaussian is the interesting quantity which can be read off from the probability density, |Ψ|2,

 
This width eventually grows linearly in time, as ħt/(ma), indicating wave-packet spreading.[11]

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):[12] 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/m2a, and thus in the future position by ħt /m2a. 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).

2D edit

 
A 2D gaussian quantum wave packet. The color (yellow green blue) indicates the phase of the wave function  , its brightness indicates  .  ,  

A gaussian 2D quantum wave function:

 

 

where

 

  [13]

The Airy wave train edit

In contrast to the above Gaussian wave packet, it has been observed[14] that a particular wave function based on Airy functions, propagates freely without envelope dispersion, maintaining its shape. It accelerates undistorted in the absence of a force field:

 
(For simplicity, ħ = 1, m = 1/2, and B is a constant, cf. nondimensionalization.)
 
Truncated view of time development for the Airy front in phase space. (Click to animate.)

Nevertheless, there is no dissonance with Ehrenfest's theorem in this force-free situation, because the state is both non-normalizable and has an undefined (infinite) x for all times. (To the extent that it could be defined, p⟩ = 0 for all times, despite the apparent acceleration of the front.)

In phase space, this is evident in the pure state Wigner quasiprobability distribution of this wavetrain, whose shape in x and p is invariant as time progresses, but whose features accelerate to the right, in accelerating parabolas B(xB3t2) + (p/BtB2)2 = 0,

 

Note the momentum distribution obtained by integrating over all x is constant. Since this is the probability density in momentum space, it is evident that the wave function itself is not normalizable.

Free propagator edit

The narrow-width limit of the Gaussian wave packet solution discussed is the free propagator kernel K. For other differential equations, this is usually called the Green's function,[15] but in quantum mechanics it is traditional to reserve the name Green's function for the time Fourier transform of K.

Returning to one dimension for simplicity, with m and ħ set equal to one, when a is the infinitesimal quantity ε, the Gaussian initial condition, rescaled so that its integral is one,

 
becomes a delta function, δ(x), so that its time evolution,
 
yields the propagator.

Note that a very narrow initial wave packet instantly becomes infinitely wide, but with a phase which is more rapidly oscillatory at large values of x. This might seem strange—the solution goes from being localized at one point to being "everywhere" at all later times, but it is a reflection of the enormous momentum uncertainty of a localized particle, as explained above.

Further note that the norm of the wave function is infinite, which is also correct, since the square of a delta function is divergent in the same way.

The factor involving ε is an infinitesimal quantity which is there to make sure that integrals over K are well defined. In the limit that ε → 0, K becomes purely oscillatory, and integrals of K are not absolutely convergent. In the remainder of this section, it will be set to zero, but in order for all the integrations over intermediate states to be well defined, the limit ε→0 is to be only taken after the final state is calculated.

The propagator is the amplitude for reaching point x at time t, when starting at the origin, x=0. By translation invariance, the amplitude for reaching a point x when starting at point y is the same function, only now translated,

 

In the limit when t is small, the propagator goes to a delta function

 
but only in the sense of distributions: The integral of this quantity multiplied by an arbitrary differentiable test function gives the value of the test function at zero.

To see this, note that the integral over all space of K equals 1 at all times,

 
since this integral is the inner-product of K with the uniform wave function. But the phase factor in the exponent has a nonzero spatial derivative everywhere except at the origin, and so when the time is small there are fast phase cancellations at all but one point. This is rigorously true when the limit ε→0 is taken at the very end.

So the propagation kernel is the (future) time evolution of a delta function, and it is continuous, in a sense: it goes to the initial delta function at small times. If the initial wave function is an infinitely narrow spike at position y,

 
it becomes the oscillatory wave,
 

Now, since every function can be written as a weighted sum of such narrow spikes,

 
the time evolution of every function ψ0 is determined by this propagation kernel K,

 

Thus, this is a formal way to express the fundamental solution or general solution. The interpretation of this expression is that the amplitude for a particle to be found at point x at time t is the amplitude that it started at y, times the amplitude that it went from y to x, summed over all the possible starting points. In other words, it is a convolution of the kernel K with the arbitrary initial condition ψ0,

 

Since the amplitude to travel from x to y after a time t+t' can be considered in two steps, the propagator obeys the composition identity,

 
which can be interpreted as follows: the amplitude to travel from x to z in time t+t' is the sum of the amplitude to travel from x to y in time t, multiplied by the amplitude to travel from y to z in time t', summed over all possible intermediate states y. This is a property of an arbitrary quantum system, and by subdividing the time into many segments, it allows the time evolution to be expressed as a path integral.[16]

Analytic continuation to diffusion edit

The spreading of wave packets in quantum mechanics is directly related to the spreading of probability densities in diffusion. For a particle which is randomly walking, the probability density function at any point satisfies the diffusion equation (also see the heat equation),

 
where the factor of 2, which can be removed by rescaling either time or space, is only for convenience.

A solution of this equation is the spreading Gaussian,

 
and, since the integral of ρt is constant while the width is becoming narrow at small times, this function approaches a delta function at t=0,
 
again only in the sense of distributions, so that
 
for any smooth test function f.

The spreading Gaussian is the propagation kernel for the diffusion equation and it obeys the convolution identity,

 
which allows diffusion to be expressed as a path integral. The propagator is the exponential of an operator H,
 
which is the infinitesimal diffusion operator,
 

A matrix has two indices, which in continuous space makes it a function of x and x'. In this case, because of translation invariance, the matrix element K only depend on the difference of the position, and a convenient abuse of notation is to refer to the operator, the matrix elements, and the function of the difference by the same name:

 

Translation invariance means that continuous matrix multiplication,

 
is essentially convolution,
 

The exponential can be defined over a range of ts which include complex values, so long as integrals over the propagation kernel stay convergent,

 
As long as the real part of z is positive, for large values of x, K is exponentially decreasing, and integrals over K are indeed absolutely convergent.

The limit of this expression for z approaching the pure imaginary axis is the above Schrödinger propagator encountered,

 
which illustrates the above time evolution of Gaussians.

From the fundamental identity of exponentiation, or path integration,

 
holds for all complex z values, where the integrals are absolutely convergent so that the operators are well defined.

Thus, quantum evolution of a Gaussian, which is the complex diffusion kernel K,

 
amounts to the time-evolved state,
 

This illustrates the above diffusive form of the complex Gaussian solutions,

 

See also edit

Remarks edit

  1. ^ By contrast, the introduction of interaction terms in dispersive equations, such as for the quantum harmonic oscillator, may result in the emergence of envelope-non-dispersive, classical-looking solutions—see coherent states: Such "minimum uncertainty states" do saturate the uncertainty principle permanently.

References edit

  1. ^ Joy Manners (2000), Quantum Physics: An Introduction, CRC Press, pp. 53–56, ISBN 978-0-7503-0720-8
  2. ^ Schwartz, Matthew. "Lecture 11: Wavepackets and dispersion" (PDF). scholar.harvard.edu. (PDF) from the original on 2023-03-18. Retrieved 2023-06-22.
  3. ^ Brillouin, Léon (1960), Wave Propagation and Group Velocity, New York: Academic Press Inc., OCLC 537250
  4. ^ a b c d e Kragh, Helge (2009). "Wave Packet". In Greenberger, Daniel; Hentschel, Klaus; Weinert, Friedel (eds.). Compendium of Quantum Physics. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg. pp. 828–830. doi:10.1007/978-3-540-70626-7_232. ISBN 978-3-540-70622-9.
  5. ^ Darwin, Charles Galton. "Free motion in the wave mechanics." Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series A, Containing Papers of a Mathematical and Physical Character 117.776 (1927): 258-293.
  6. ^ a b Schiff, Leonard I. (1995). Quantum mechanics. International series in pure and applied physics (3. ed., 29. print ed.). New York: McGraw-Hill. ISBN 978-0-07-055287-6.
  7. ^ Newton, Roger G. (1982). Scattering theory of waves and particles. Texts and monographs in physics (2 ed.). New York, Heidelberg, Berlin: Springer. ISBN 978-0-387-10950-3.
  8. ^ Susskind, Leonard; Friedman, Art; Susskind, Leonard (2014). Quantum mechanics: the theoretical minimum; [what you need to know to start doing physics]. The theoretical minimum / Leonard Susskind and George Hrabovsky. New York, NY: Basic Books. ISBN 978-0-465-08061-8.
  9. ^ Pauli, Wolfgang (2000), Wave Mechanics: Volume 5 of Pauli Lectures on Physics, Books on Physics, Dover Publications, ISBN 978-0-486-41462-1
  10. ^ * Abers, E.; Pearson, Ed (2004), Quantum Mechanics, Addison Wesley, Prentice-Hall Inc., ISBN 978-0-13-146100-0
  11. ^ Darwin, C. G. (1927). "Free motion in the wave mechanics", Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series A, Containing Papers of a Mathematical and Physical Character 117 (776), 258-293.
  12. ^ Richard Fitzpatrick, Oscillations and Waves
  13. ^ Cohen-Tannoudji, Diu & Laloë, Quantum Mechanics, complement GI, §3-a
  14. ^ Berry, M. V.; Balazs, N. L. (1979), "Nonspreading wave packets", Am J Phys, 47 (3): 264–267, Bibcode:1979AmJPh..47..264B, doi:10.1119/1.11855
  15. ^ Jackson, J. D. (1975), Classical Electrodynamics (2nd ed.), New York: John Wiley & Sons, Inc., ISBN 978-0-471-43132-9
  16. ^ Feynman, R. P.; Hibbs, A. R. (1965), Quantum Mechanics and Path Integrals, New York: McGraw-Hill, ISBN 978-0-07-020650-2

External links edit

  •   Learning materials related to wave packet motion at Wikiversity
  •   The dictionary definition of wave packet at Wiktionary
  • 1d Wave packet plot in Google
  • 1d Wave train and probability density plot in Google
  • 2d Wave packet plot in Google
  • 2d Wave train plot in Google
  • 2d probability density plot in Google
  • Quantum physics online : Interactive simulation of a free wavepacket
  • Web-Schrödinger: Interactive 2D wave packet dynamics simulation
  • A simulation of a wave package in 2D (According to FOURIER-Synthesis in 2D)

wave, packet, wave, train, redirects, here, mathematics, concept, periodic, travelling, wave, physics, wave, packet, also, known, wave, train, wave, group, short, burst, localized, wave, action, that, travels, unit, outlined, envelope, wave, packet, analyzed, . Wave train redirects here For the mathematics concept see Periodic travelling wave 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 A looped animation of a wave packet propagating without dispersion Contents 1 Historical background 2 Significance in quantum mechanics 2 1 Wave packets and the classical limit 2 2 Wave packets and quantum scattering 3 Basic behaviors 3 1 Non dispersive 3 2 Dispersive 4 Gaussian wave packets in quantum mechanics 5 2D 6 The Airy wave train 7 Free propagator 8 Analytic continuation to diffusion 9 See also 10 Remarks 11 References 12 External linksHistorical background editIdeas 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 Schrodinger 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 Schrodinger s paper Werner Heisenberg published his paper on the uncertainty principle showing in the process that Schrodinger 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 Schrodinger s equation for an unbound electron in free space assuming an initial Gaussian wave packet 5 Darwin showed that at time t displaystyle t nbsp later the position x displaystyle x nbsp of the packet traveling at velocity v displaystyle v nbsp would bex 0 v t s 2 h t 2 p s m 2 displaystyle x 0 vt pm sqrt sigma 2 ht 2 pi sigma m 2 nbsp where s displaystyle sigma nbsp is the uncertainty in the initial position Later in 1927 Paul Ehrenfest showed that the time T displaystyle T nbsp for a matter wave packet of width D x displaystyle Delta x nbsp and mass m displaystyle m nbsp to spread by a factor of 2 was T D x m ℏ textstyle T approx Delta x sqrt m hbar nbsp Since ℏ displaystyle hbar nbsp is so small wave packets on the scale of macroscopic objects with large width and mass double only at cosmic time scales 4 830 Significance in quantum mechanics editQuantum mechanics describes the nature of atomic and subatomic systems using Schrodinger 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 D x displaystyle Delta x nbsp and momentum uncertainty D p x displaystyle Delta p x nbsp 6 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 D p x displaystyle Delta p x nbsp 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 wave packet mathematics play an important role in quantum scattering approaches A monochromatic single momentum source produces convergence difficulties in the scattering models 7 150 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 8 295 Basic behaviors editSee also Dispersion water waves and Dispersion optics Non dispersive edit nbsp A wave packet without dispersion real or imaginary part 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 2 u t 2 c 2 2 u displaystyle partial 2 u over partial t 2 c 2 nabla 2 u nbsp where c is the speed of the wave s propagation in a given medium Using the physics time convention e iwt the wave equation has plane wave solutionsu x t e i k x w t displaystyle u mathbf x t e i mathbf k cdot x omega t nbsp wherew 2 k 2 c 2 displaystyle omega 2 mathbf k 2 c 2 nbsp and k 2 k x 2 k y 2 k z 2 displaystyle mathbf k 2 k x 2 k y 2 k z 2 nbsp This relation between w and k should be valid so that the plane wave is a solution to the wave equation It is called a dispersion relation To simplify consider only waves propagating in one dimension extension to three dimensions is straightforward Then the general solution isu x t A e i k x w t B e i k x w t displaystyle u x t Ae i kx omega t Be i kx omega t nbsp in which we may take w kc The first term represents a wave propagating in the positive x direction since it is a function of x ct only the second term being a function of x ct represents a wave propagating in the 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 From the basic solutions in one dimension a general form of a wave packet can be expressed asu x t 1 2 p A k e i k x w k t d k displaystyle u x t frac 1 sqrt 2 pi int infty infty A k e i kx omega k t dk nbsp As in the plane wave case the wave packet travels to the right for w k kc since u x t F x ct and to the left for w k kc since u x t F x ct The factor 1 2 p displaystyle 1 sqrt 2 pi nbsp comes from Fourier transform conventions The amplitude A k contains the coefficients of the linear superposition of the plane wave solutions These coefficients can in turn be expressed as a function of u x t evaluated at t 0 by inverting the Fourier transform relation above A k 1 2 p u x 0 e i k x d x displaystyle A k frac 1 sqrt 2 pi int infty infty u x 0 e ikx dx nbsp For instance choosingu x 0 e x 2 i k 0 x displaystyle u x 0 e x 2 ik 0 x nbsp we obtainA k 1 2 e k k 0 2 4 displaystyle A k frac 1 sqrt 2 e frac k k 0 2 4 nbsp and finallyu x t e x c t 2 i k 0 x c t e x c t 2 cos 2 p x c t l i sin 2 p x c t l displaystyle begin aligned u x t amp e x ct 2 ik 0 x ct amp e x ct 2 left cos left 2 pi frac x ct lambda right i sin left 2 pi frac x ct lambda right right end aligned nbsp The nondispersive propagation of the real or imaginary part of this wave packet is presented in the above animation Dispersive edit nbsp A wave packet with dispersion Notice the wave spreads out and its amplitude reduces nbsp Position space probability density of an initially Gaussian state moving in one dimension at minimally uncertain constant momentum in free space By contrast as an example of dispersion where a wave changes shape during propagation consider instead solutions to the Schrodinger equation nondimensionalized with 2Dx m and ħ set equal to one i ps t 1 2 2 ps displaystyle i partial psi over partial t frac 1 2 nabla 2 psi nbsp yielding the dispersion relation w 1 2 k 2 displaystyle omega frac 1 2 mathbf k 2 nbsp Once again restricting attention to one dimension the solution to the Schrodinger equation satisfying the initial condition ps x 0 2 p 4 exp x 2 i k 0 x textstyle psi x 0 sqrt 4 2 pi exp left x 2 ik 0 x right nbsp representing a wave packet localized in space at the origin is seen to beps x t 2 p 4 1 2 i t e 1 4 k 0 2 e 1 1 2 i t x i k 0 2 2 2 p 4 1 2 i t e 1 1 4 t 2 x k 0 t 2 e i 1 1 4 t 2 k 0 2 t x x 1 2 t k 0 2 displaystyle begin aligned psi x t amp frac sqrt 4 2 pi sqrt 1 2it e frac 1 4 k 0 2 e frac 1 1 2it left x frac ik 0 2 right 2 amp frac sqrt 4 2 pi sqrt 1 2it e frac 1 1 4t 2 x k 0 t 2 e i frac 1 1 4t 2 left k 0 2tx x frac 1 2 tk 0 2 right end aligned nbsp An impression of the dispersive behavior of this wave packet is obtained by looking at the probability density ps x t 2 2 p 1 4 t 2 e 2 x k 0 t 2 1 4 t 2 displaystyle psi x t 2 frac sqrt 2 pi sqrt 1 4t 2 e frac 2 x k 0 t 2 1 4t 2 nbsp 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 nb 1 The momentum profile A k remains invariant The probability current isj r v 1 2 i ps ps ps ps r k 0 4 t x k 0 t 1 4 t 2 displaystyle j rho v frac 1 2i psi nabla psi psi nabla psi rho left k 0 frac 4t x k 0 t 1 4t 2 right nbsp Gaussian wave packets in quantum mechanics edit nbsp Superposition of 1D plane waves blue that sum to form a Gaussian wave packet red that propagates to the right while spreading Blue dots follow each plane wave s phase velocity while the red line follows the central group velocity nbsp 1D Gaussian wave packet shown in the complex plane for a 2 and k 4 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 9 10 ps r 0 e r r 2 a displaystyle psi mathbf r 0 e mathbf r cdot mathbf r 2a nbsp where a is a positive real number the square of the width of the wave packet a 2 r r 3 1 2 D x 2 displaystyle a 2 langle mathbf r cdot mathbf r rangle 3 langle 1 rangle 2 Delta x 2 nbsp The Fourier transform is also a Gaussian in terms of the wavenumber the k vector with inverse width 1 a 2 k k 3 1 2 D p x ℏ 2 displaystyle 1 a 2 langle mathbf k cdot mathbf k rangle 3 langle 1 rangle 2 Delta p x hbar 2 nbsp so that D x D p x ℏ 2 displaystyle Delta x Delta p x hbar 2 nbsp i e it satisfies the uncertainty relation ps k 0 2 p a 3 2 e a k k 2 displaystyle psi mathbf k 0 2 pi a 3 2 e a mathbf k cdot mathbf k 2 nbsp Each separate wave only phase rotates in time so that the time dependent Fourier transformed solution is PS k t 2 p a 3 2 e a k k 2 e i E t ℏ 2 p a 3 2 e a k k 2 i ℏ 2 k k 2 m t ℏ 2 p a 3 2 e a i ℏ t m k k 2 displaystyle begin aligned Psi mathbf k t amp 2 pi a 3 2 e a mathbf k cdot mathbf k 2 e iEt hbar amp 2 pi a 3 2 e a mathbf k cdot mathbf k 2 i hbar 2 mathbf k cdot mathbf k 2m t hbar amp 2 pi a 3 2 e a i hbar t m mathbf k cdot mathbf k 2 end aligned nbsp The inverse Fourier transform is still a Gaussian but now the parameter a has become complex and there is an overall normalization factor 6 PS r t a a i ℏ t m 3 2 e r r 2 a i ℏ t m displaystyle Psi mathbf r t left a over a i hbar t m right 3 2 e mathbf r cdot mathbf r over 2 a i hbar t m nbsp The integral of PS over all space is invariant because it is the inner product of PS with the state of zero energy which is a wave with infinite wavelength a constant function of space For any energy eigenstate h x the inner product h ps h r ps r d 3 r displaystyle langle eta psi rangle int eta mathbf r psi mathbf r d 3 mathbf r nbsp only changes in time in a simple way its phase rotates with a frequency determined by the energy of h When h has zero energy like the infinite wavelength wave it doesn t change at all The integral PS 2d3r is also invariant which is a statement of the conservation of probability Explicitly P r PS 2 PS PS a a 2 ℏ t m 2 3 e a r r a 2 ℏ t m 2 displaystyle P r Psi 2 Psi Psi left a over sqrt a 2 hbar t m 2 right 3 e a mathbf r cdot mathbf r over a 2 hbar t m 2 nbsp in which a is the width of P r at t 0 r is the distance from the origin the speed of the particle is zero and the time origin t 0 can be chosen arbitrarily The width of the Gaussian is the interesting quantity which can be read off from the probability density PS 2 a 2 ℏ t m 2 a displaystyle sqrt a 2 hbar t m 2 over a nbsp This width eventually grows linearly in time as ħt m a indicating wave packet spreading 11 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 12 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 Dx 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 DxDp ħ 2 has now increased by a factor of ħt ma for large t 2D edit nbsp A 2D gaussian quantum wave packet The color yellow green blue indicates the phase of the wave function ps displaystyle psi nbsp its brightness indicates ps 2 ps m a x 2 displaystyle psi 2 psi max 2 nbsp k 0 x k 0 displaystyle k 0x k 0 nbsp k 0 y 0 displaystyle k 0y 0 nbsp A gaussian 2D quantum wave function ps x y t ps x t ps y t displaystyle psi x y t psi x t psi y t nbsp ps x t 2 a 2 p 1 4 e i ϕ a 4 4 ℏ 2 t 2 m 2 1 4 e i k 0 x e x p x ℏ k 0 m t 2 a 2 2 i ℏ t m displaystyle psi x t frac 2a 2 pi 1 4 frac e i phi a 4 frac 4 hbar 2 t 2 m 2 1 4 e ik 0 x exp frac x frac hbar k 0 m t 2 a 2 frac 2i hbar t m nbsp whereϕ 8 ℏ k 0 2 2 m t displaystyle phi theta frac hbar k 0 2 2m t nbsp t g 2 8 2 ℏ t m a 2 displaystyle tg 2 theta frac 2 hbar t ma 2 nbsp 13 The Airy wave train editIn contrast to the above Gaussian wave packet it has been observed 14 that a particular wave function based on Airy functions propagates freely without envelope dispersion maintaining its shape It accelerates undistorted in the absence of a force field ps Ai B x B 3 t 2 e i B 3 t x 2 3 B 3 t 2 displaystyle psi operatorname Ai B x B 3 t 2 e iB 3 t left x tfrac 2 3 B 3 t 2 right nbsp For simplicity ħ 1 m 1 2 and B is a constant cf nondimensionalization nbsp Truncated view of time development for the Airy front in phase space Click to animate Nevertheless there is no dissonance with Ehrenfest s theorem in this force free situation because the state is both non normalizable and has an undefined infinite x for all times To the extent that it could be defined p 0 for all times despite the apparent acceleration of the front In phase space this is evident in the pure state Wigner quasiprobability distribution of this wavetrain whose shape in x and p is invariant as time progresses but whose features accelerate to the right in accelerating parabolas B x B3t2 p B tB2 2 0 W x p t W x B 3 t 2 p B 3 t 0 1 2 1 3 p B A i 2 2 3 B x p 2 B 2 2 B p t displaystyle W x p t W x B 3 t 2 p B 3 t 0 1 over 2 1 3 pi B mathrm Ai left 2 2 3 left Bx p 2 over B 2 2Bpt right right nbsp Note the momentum distribution obtained by integrating over all x is constant Since this is the probability density in momentum space it is evident that the wave function itself is not normalizable Free propagator editThe narrow width limit of the Gaussian wave packet solution discussed is the free propagator kernel K For other differential equations this is usually called the Green s function 15 but in quantum mechanics it is traditional to reserve the name Green s function for the time Fourier transform of K Returning to one dimension for simplicity with m and ħ set equal to one when a is the infinitesimal quantity e the Gaussian initial condition rescaled so that its integral is one ps 0 x 1 2 p e e x 2 2 e displaystyle psi 0 x 1 over sqrt 2 pi varepsilon e x 2 over 2 varepsilon nbsp becomes a delta function d x so that its time evolution K t x 1 2 p i t e e x 2 2 i t e displaystyle K t x 1 over sqrt 2 pi it varepsilon e x 2 over 2it varepsilon nbsp yields the propagator Note that a very narrow initial wave packet instantly becomes infinitely wide but with a phase which is more rapidly oscillatory at large values of x This might seem strange the solution goes from being localized at one point to being everywhere at all later times but it is a reflection of the enormous momentum uncertainty of a localized particle as explained above Further note that the norm of the wave function is infinite which is also correct since the square of a delta function is divergent in the same way The factor involving e is an infinitesimal quantity which is there to make sure that integrals over K are well defined In the limit that e 0 K becomes purely oscillatory and integrals of K are not absolutely convergent In the remainder of this section it will be set to zero but in order for all the integrations over intermediate states to be well defined the limit e 0 is to be only taken after the final state is calculated The propagator is the amplitude for reaching point x at time t when starting at the origin x 0 By translation invariance the amplitude for reaching a point x when starting at point y is the same function only now translated K t x y K t x y 1 2 p i t e i x y 2 2 t displaystyle K t x y K t x y 1 over sqrt 2 pi it e i x y 2 over 2t nbsp In the limit when t is small the propagator goes to a delta functionlim t 0 K t x y d x y displaystyle lim t to 0 K t x y delta x y nbsp but only in the sense of distributions The integral of this quantity multiplied by an arbitrary differentiable test function gives the value of the test function at zero To see this note that the integral over all space of K equals 1 at all times K t x d x 1 displaystyle int K t x dx 1 nbsp since this integral is the inner product of K with the uniform wave function But the phase factor in the exponent has a nonzero spatial derivative everywhere except at the origin and so when the time is small there are fast phase cancellations at all but one point This is rigorously true when the limit e 0 is taken at the very end So the propagation kernel is the future time evolution of a delta function and it is continuous in a sense it goes to the initial delta function at small times If the initial wave function is an infinitely narrow spike at position y ps 0 x d x y displaystyle psi 0 x delta x y nbsp it becomes the oscillatory wave ps t x 1 2 p i t e i x y 2 2 t displaystyle psi t x 1 over sqrt 2 pi it e i x y 2 2t nbsp Now since every function can be written as a weighted sum of such narrow spikes ps 0 x ps 0 y d x y d y displaystyle psi 0 x int psi 0 y delta x y dy nbsp the time evolution of every function ps 0 is determined by this propagation kernel K ps t x ps 0 y 1 2 p i t e i x y 2 2 t d y displaystyle psi t x int psi 0 y 1 over sqrt 2 pi it e i x y 2 2t dy nbsp Thus this is a formal way to express the fundamental solution or general solution The interpretation of this expression is that the amplitude for a particle to be found at point x at time t is the amplitude that it started at y times the amplitude that it went from y to x summed over all the possible starting points In other words it is a convolution of the kernel K with the arbitrary initial condition ps0 ps t K ps 0 displaystyle psi t K psi 0 nbsp Since the amplitude to travel from x to y after a time t t can be considered in two steps the propagator obeys the composition identity K x y t K y z t d y K x z t t displaystyle int K x y t K y z t dy K x z t t nbsp which can be interpreted as follows the amplitude to travel from x to z in time t t is the sum of the amplitude to travel from x to y in time t multiplied by the amplitude to travel from y to z in time t summed over all possible intermediate states y This is a property of an arbitrary quantum system and by subdividing the time into many segments it allows the time evolution to be expressed as a path integral 16 Analytic continuation to diffusion editSee also Heat equation Fundamental solutions and Heat kernel The spreading of wave packets in quantum mechanics is directly related to the spreading of probability densities in diffusion For a particle which is randomly walking the probability density function at any point satisfies the diffusion equation also see the heat equation t r 1 2 2 x 2 r displaystyle partial over partial t rho 1 over 2 partial 2 over partial x 2 rho nbsp where the factor of 2 which can be removed by rescaling either time or space is only for convenience A solution of this equation is the spreading Gaussian r t x 1 2 p t e x 2 2 t displaystyle rho t x 1 over sqrt 2 pi t e x 2 over 2t nbsp and since the integral of rt is constant while the width is becoming narrow at small times this function approaches a delta function at t 0 lim t 0 r t x d x displaystyle lim t to 0 rho t x delta x nbsp again only in the sense of distributions so that lim t 0 x f x r t x f 0 displaystyle lim t to 0 int x f x rho t x f 0 nbsp for any smooth test function f The spreading Gaussian is the propagation kernel for the diffusion equation and it obeys the convolution identity K t t K t K t displaystyle K t t K t K t nbsp which allows diffusion to be expressed as a path integral The propagator is the exponential of an operator H K t x e t H displaystyle K t x e tH nbsp which is the infinitesimal diffusion operator H 2 2 displaystyle H nabla 2 over 2 nbsp A matrix has two indices which in continuous space makes it a function of x and x In this case because of translation invariance the matrix element K only depend on the difference of the position and a convenient abuse of notation is to refer to the operator the matrix elements and the function of the difference by the same name K t x x K t x x displaystyle K t x x K t x x nbsp Translation invariance means that continuous matrix multiplication C x x x A x x B x x displaystyle C x x int x A x x B x x nbsp is essentially convolution C D C x x x A x x B x x y A D y B y displaystyle C Delta C x x int x A x x B x x int y A Delta y B y nbsp The exponential can be defined over a range of ts which include complex values so long as integrals over the propagation kernel stay convergent K z x e z H displaystyle K z x e zH nbsp As long as the real part of z is positive for large values of x K is exponentially decreasing and integrals over K are indeed absolutely convergent The limit of this expression for z approaching the pure imaginary axis is the above Schrodinger propagator encountered K t S c h r K i t e e i t e H displaystyle K t rm Schr K it varepsilon e it varepsilon H nbsp which illustrates the above time evolution of Gaussians From the fundamental identity of exponentiation or path integration K z K z K z z displaystyle K z K z K z z nbsp holds for all complex z values where the integrals are absolutely convergent so that the operators are well defined Thus quantum evolution of a Gaussian which is the complex diffusion kernel K ps 0 x K a x K a d x displaystyle psi 0 x K a x K a delta x nbsp amounts to the time evolved state ps t K i t K a K a i t displaystyle psi t K it K a K a it nbsp This illustrates the above diffusive form of the complex Gaussian solutions ps t x 1 2 p a i t e x 2 2 a i t displaystyle psi t x 1 over sqrt 2 pi a it e x 2 over 2 a it nbsp See also editWave Wave propagation Fourier analysis Group velocity Phase velocity Free particle Coherent states Waveform Wavelet Matter wave Pulse signal processing Pulse physics Schrodinger equation Introduction to quantum mechanics SolitonRemarks edit By contrast the introduction of interaction terms in dispersive equations such as for the quantum harmonic oscillator may result in the emergence of envelope non dispersive classical looking solutions see coherent states Such minimum uncertainty states do saturate the uncertainty principle permanently References edit Joy Manners 2000 Quantum Physics An Introduction CRC Press pp 53 56 ISBN 978 0 7503 0720 8 Schwartz Matthew Lecture 11 Wavepackets and dispersion PDF scholar harvard edu Archived PDF from the original on 2023 03 18 Retrieved 2023 06 22 Brillouin Leon 1960 Wave Propagation and Group Velocity New York Academic Press Inc OCLC 537250 a b c d e Kragh Helge 2009 Wave Packet In Greenberger Daniel Hentschel Klaus Weinert Friedel eds Compendium of Quantum Physics Berlin Heidelberg Springer Berlin Heidelberg pp 828 830 doi 10 1007 978 3 540 70626 7 232 ISBN 978 3 540 70622 9 Darwin Charles Galton Free motion in the wave mechanics Proceedings of the Royal Society of London Series A Containing Papers of a Mathematical and Physical Character 117 776 1927 258 293 a b Schiff Leonard I 1995 Quantum mechanics International series in pure and applied physics 3 ed 29 print ed New York McGraw Hill ISBN 978 0 07 055287 6 Newton Roger G 1982 Scattering theory of waves and particles Texts and monographs in physics 2 ed New York Heidelberg Berlin Springer ISBN 978 0 387 10950 3 Susskind Leonard Friedman Art Susskind Leonard 2014 Quantum mechanics the theoretical minimum what you need to know to start doing physics The theoretical minimum Leonard Susskind and George Hrabovsky New York NY Basic Books ISBN 978 0 465 08061 8 Pauli Wolfgang 2000 Wave Mechanics Volume 5 of Pauli Lectures on Physics Books on Physics Dover Publications ISBN 978 0 486 41462 1 Abers E Pearson Ed 2004 Quantum Mechanics Addison Wesley Prentice Hall Inc ISBN 978 0 13 146100 0 Darwin C G 1927 Free motion in the wave mechanics Proceedings of the Royal Society of London Series A Containing Papers of a Mathematical and Physical Character 117 776 258 293 Richard Fitzpatrick Oscillations and Waves Cohen Tannoudji Diu amp Laloe Quantum Mechanics complement GI 3 a Berry M V Balazs N L 1979 Nonspreading wave packets Am J Phys 47 3 264 267 Bibcode 1979AmJPh 47 264B doi 10 1119 1 11855 Jackson J D 1975 Classical Electrodynamics 2nd ed New York John Wiley amp Sons Inc ISBN 978 0 471 43132 9 Feynman R P Hibbs A R 1965 Quantum Mechanics and Path Integrals New York McGraw Hill ISBN 978 0 07 020650 2External links edit nbsp Learning materials related to wave packet motion at Wikiversity nbsp The dictionary definition of wave packet at Wiktionary 1d Wave packet plot in Google 1d Wave train and probability density plot in Google 2d Wave packet plot in Google 2d Wave train plot in Google 2d probability density plot in Google Quantum physics online Interactive simulation of a free wavepacket Web Schrodinger Interactive 2D wave packet dynamics simulation A simulation of a wave package in 2D According to FOURIER Synthesis in 2D Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Wave packet amp oldid 1214076496, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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