Massive Particles and Standing Waves

In summary: Hi, glengarry.If you mean "at rest", you mean the momentum is zero, then yes. It's position is completely unknown. You gave the energy as stationary, giving it a single frequency. But the wavelength is proportional to the inverse of the momentum; infinite. The 'wave' is a horizontal line oscillating up and down at the energy frequency where the phase is unmeasurable.
  • #1
LarryS
Gold Member
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Massive particles have a rest energy, m0c2, and therefore a matching rest or intrinsic frequency.

So, does that mean that one massive particle at rest in one dimension is a standing wave?

Thanks in advance.
 
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  • #2
referframe said:
Massive particles have a rest energy, m0c2, and therefore a matching rest or intrinsic frequency.

This sounds suspiciously like a non-sequitur.
 
  • #3
glengarry said:
This sounds suspiciously like a non-sequitur.

How so?

To rephrase my question: What is the wave function for one massive particle at rest?
 
  • #4
referframe said:
How so?

To rephrase my question: What is the wave function for one massive particle at rest?

I just don't know what a wavefunction might have to do with a "massive particle." When I think of a particle, I picture a dot just hanging out at some arbitrary point in spacetime.
 
  • #6
Count Iblis said:

[PLAIN said:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zitterbewegung][/PLAIN]
Zitterbewegung (English: "trembling motion", from German) is a theoretical rapid motion of elementary particles, in particular electrons, that obey the Dirac equation.

Particulate motion, no matter how convoluted the trajectory, is something entirely different from the concept of standing-wave frequency. The original post was trying to somehow link these two things together.
 
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  • #7
Hi, referframe
Solution of relativistic free particle equation (See Wiki Klein Gordon equation) is ψ=exp{i(kx-ωt)} where ω^2 - k^2 = m^2 in unit h'=c=1.
We put k=0 then ψ= exp(-iωt) where ω = m.
referframe said:
So, does that mean that one massive particle at rest in one dimension is a standing wave?
This is a standing wave.
Regards.
 
  • #8
The units of mass and time (the inverse of frequency) are two of the seven fundamental SI units. Therefore, the equation, [tex]\omega=m[/tex], according to accepted scientific notation, is simply absurd. Otherwise, we could do this:

1/t=m
m*t=1

Weird.

Perhaps the Klein-Gordon equation is not "really" saying something like that...
 
  • #9
Hi, glengarry.
The relation ω=m is h'ω=mc^2 in MKSA unit where h' is Planck constant[Js] /2pai, c is the velocity of light[m/s], m is mass of the particle [kg] thus ω is frequency [1/s].
Regards.
 
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  • #10
sweet springs said:
Hi, glengarry.
The relation ω=m is h'ω=mc^2 in MKSA unit where h' is Planck constant[Js] /2pai, c is the velocity of light[m/s], m is mass of the particle [kg] thus ω is frequency [1/s].
Regards.

Okay, that simplified notation caught me by surprise. My only confusion now is the statement, "This is a standing wave." What is a standing wave? A "massive particle at rest"?
 
  • #11
Hi, glengarry.
glengarry said:
What is a standing wave? A "massive particle at rest"?
We can describe standing wave as a wave that oscillates in time, but has a spatial dependence that is stationary (See Wiki standing wave). e^iωt is a wave that oscillates in time with frequency ω, but has a spatial dependence that is stationary i.e. constant 1 for any x.
Regards.
 
  • #12
sweet springs said:
Hi, glengarry.

We can describe standing wave as a wave that oscillates in time, but has a spatial dependence that is stationary (See Wiki standing wave). e^iωt is a wave that oscillates in time with frequency ω, but has a spatial dependence that is stationary i.e. constant 1 for any x.
Regards.

I'm with glengarry in expressing some puzzlement here. I don't know how, just because something can be associated with some "frequency", that it is automatically a "wave", or worse still, a "standing wave".

The wavefunction of any particle must be solved not only in consideration of the mass of the particle, but also the boundary conditions! Every undergraduate physics student has had to write the wavefunction for a free particle. Do you see a 'standing wave' here? I'm sure you've solve the simple 1D potential barrier problem for a simple tunneling phenomenon. No standing wave there either. In fact, in none of these are the particle even "vibrating". The wavefunction is not a physical wave, nor does it imply that the particle being described oscillates up and down. The "vertical axis" of the wavefunction is NOT a "position".

Zz.
 
  • #13
referframe said:
Massive particles have a rest energy, m0c2, and therefore a matching rest or intrinsic frequency.

So, does that mean that one massive particle at rest in one dimension is a standing wave?

Thanks in advance.

If you mean "at rest", you mean the momentum is zero, then yes. It's position is completely unknown. You gave the energy as stationary, giving it a single frequency. But the wavelength is proportional to the inverse of the momentum; infinite. The 'wave' is a horizontal line oscillating up and down at the energy frequency where the phase is unmeasurable.
 
  • #14
Hi, Zz.
I think all the solutions of stationary Shrodinger equation Hφ=Eφ are stationary/standing wave functions and their time dependent full expressions ψ=e^-iE/h'φ are also stationary/standing wave functions. So both e^iwt and e^i(kx-ωt) are stationary/standing wave functions. Stationary/standing wave of complex numbers, if applicable and worth to be considered, appear different from that of real number. Energy eigenstates of a particle in a box have 0 nodes as real number waves do.
Regards.
 
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  • #15
sweet springs said:
Hi, Zz.
I think all the solutions of stationary Shrodinger equation Hφ=Eφ are stationary/standing wave functions and their time dependent full expressions ψ=e^-iE/h'φ are also stationary/standing wave functions. So both e^iwt and e^i(kx-ωt) are stationary/standing wave functions. Stationary/standing wave of complex numbers, if applicable and worth to be considered, appear different from that of real number. Energy eigenstates of a particle in a box have 0 nodes as real number waves do.
Regards.

What you said makes very little sense, and it is also completely wrong with regards to what a physical standing wave is.

1. Particle in a box does not have 0 nodes. It has two nodes for the LOWEST state.

2. Since when [itex]e^{ikx}[/itex] ONLY represents a standing wave?

3. This has gone off-topic. The original question equating mass/energy with "vibration" is clearly not valid here.

Zz.
 
  • #16
Hi, Zz.
ZapperZ said:
1. Particle in a box does not have 0 nodes. It has two nodes for the LOWEST state.
You are right. I should have said nodes where amplitudes are zero instead of "0 nodes".
ZapperZ said:
2. Since when [itex]e^{ikx}[/itex] ONLY represents a standing wave?
I am sure that real number wave cos kx cos ωt is stationary/standing wave. Further I suppose we call complex number wave cos kx e^-iωt , e^ikx e^-iωt or e^-iωt also stationary/standing. I appreciate your correction.
ZapperZ said:
3. This has gone off-topic. The original question equating mass/energy with "vibration" is clearly not valid here.
I would like to know what invalid features vibration e^-iωt bring?
Regards.
 
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  • #17
sweet springs said:
I am sure that real number wave cos kx cos ωt is stationary/standing wave. Further I suppose we call complex number wave cos kx e^-iωt , e^ikx e^-iωt or e^-iωt also stationary/standing. I appreciate your correction.

These have no specific description. If what you say is true, then there's no such thing as a traveling wave!

The plane wave solution is a time-independent solution. It doesn't say that this is a standing or traveling wave. Thus, your claim that this is ONLY a standing wave is wrong.

I would like to know what invalid features vibration e^-iωt bring?
Regards.

What is "vibrating"? Did you miss the part where I said that in the wave function, the VERTICAL AXIS of the wave function is NOT position, i.e. it isn't of the form y=A sin(kx-wt), where y is the vertical displacement of the particle. The wavefunction [itex]\psi[/itex] cannot be interpreted in such naive form! So what is vibrating?

Zz.
 
  • #18
Hi, Zz
By your suggestions now I find I do not know well about definition of "standing wave" and "vibration" or "oscillation". Without interpretation with these words I restate that not-normalized wave function of rest particle is e^-iωt where ω=mc^2/h'.
Thanks.

PS
Wiki- oscillation: The term vibration is sometimes used more narrowly to mean a mechanical oscillation but sometimes is used to be synonymous with "oscillation."
Wiki- standing wave: A standing wave, also known as a stationary wave, is a wave that remains in a constant position.
Wiki-stationary state: It is called stationary because the corresponding probability density has no time dependence.
 
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1. What are massive particles and standing waves?

Massive particles refer to particles that have mass, such as atoms or subatomic particles. Standing waves refer to a type of wave that appears to be stationary, caused by the interference of two waves traveling in opposite directions.

2. How are massive particles and standing waves related?

Massive particles can exhibit wave-like properties, and can be described by standing waves. This is known as wave-particle duality, which is a fundamental concept in quantum mechanics.

3. What is the significance of standing waves in quantum mechanics?

Standing waves play a crucial role in understanding the behavior of particles at the quantum level. They help explain phenomena such as particle tunneling, wavefunction collapse, and the quantization of energy levels.

4. Can standing waves be observed in the real world?

Yes, standing waves can be observed in various physical systems, such as musical instruments, electromagnetic fields, and even in atoms. However, their observation at the quantum level is more complex and requires advanced experimental techniques.

5. How do massive particles and standing waves impact our understanding of the universe?

The concept of wave-particle duality has revolutionized our understanding of the universe and has led to the development of quantum mechanics. It has helped us understand the behavior of particles at the microscopic level, and has implications for technologies such as computers and communication devices.

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