View Full Version : wave-packets with opposite momenta.
alemsalem
Feb5-11, 11:39 AM
Is it possible to prepare a particle with a wave-packet having momenta in opposite directions,
so that you have two localized packets moving away from each other (for a single particle)?
The_Duck
Feb5-11, 02:02 PM
Sure. Send a particle at a potential barrier with a height and width such that the particle has some probability to tunnel through, and some probability to be reflected. After encountering the barrier, a portion of the particle's wave function will be on the other side of the barrier travelling in the original direction, while a different portion will be moving away from the barrier opposite the original direction of motion, having been reflected.
omkatariya
Feb6-11, 03:01 AM
is phase velocity of electron in microwave sense is greater than speed of light?
omkatariya
Feb6-11, 03:10 AM
please solve my problem....
is phase velocity of electron is greater than speed of light.?
omkatariya
Feb6-11, 03:20 AM
i think its very complicated things..
alemsalem
Feb6-11, 03:37 AM
its not higher than the speed of light, I think its half the particle's velocity (group velocity)
Vphase = (h*omega)/(h k) = (p^2/2m)/p = p/2m = v/2 roughly speaking..
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