Difference between wavenumber and wave mode?

In summary, the conversation discussed the difference between wave number and wave mode and how they relate to each other in terms of antinode numbers and frequency. The concept of mode refers to one of the independent harmonic oscillator solutions in the Fourier decomposition of the radiation field, while the number of antinodes in a standing wave corresponds to the mode number. The density of modes in the resonant cavity represents the number of modes per unit frequency per unit volume. Each mode has an associated energy of ##k_B T## according to the equipartition theorem, but each antinode does not have its own energy. Overall, the conversation also touched on the confusion surrounding the use of "wave mode" in the context of blackbody radiation.
  • #1
sawer
65
2
Are these two, wave number and wave mode, same thing?

If not, what is the difference?

Thanks...
 
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  • #2
Have you checked the definitions in, say, a dictionary, to see?
What did you find out?
 
  • #3
Yes I checked.

Linear wave number is L/(λ/2) for a specific frequency. That gives antinode number in a standing wave. So these two must be same thing.
http://web.utk.edu/~cnattras/Physics221Spring2013/modules/m10/images/stand.gif
I'm trying to understand blackbody radiation. But the documents that explain blackbody radiation use "wave mode" term confusingly.

For exampe according to Rayleigh–Jeans every mode of a standing wave for a particular frequency has energy of kt. but what does that mean?

Does it, every antinode has an energy of kt? (So wave mode and wave number and antinode numbers are all same thing?)
 
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  • #4
A wave mode refers to a normal mode of the electromagnetic radiation or equivalently a Fourier mode of the Fourier decomposition of the associated electromagnetic field. Recall that the electromagnetic field associated with the radiation in the cavity can be expressed as a superposition of independent harmonic oscillator solutions. The normal modes of the radiation then refer to these independent harmonic oscillator solutions. The normal modes therefore have associated with them a wave number ##k## corresponding to the frequency of oscillation so you can use wave mode and ##k## interchangeably. But nodes are different from modes.

Each mode of the electromagnetic field of the radiation in the cavity has an energy ##k_B T## by application of the equipartition theorem to the electromagnetic energy density.
 
  • #5
WannabeNewton said:
Each mode of the electromagnetic field of the radiation in the cavity has an energy ##k_B T## by application of the equipartition theorem to the electromagnetic energy density.

So if we rewrite this sentence: each "antinode" of a standing wave has an energy of ##k_B T## . Right?

So for that diagram:

http://web.utk.edu/~cnattras/Physics221Spring2013/modules/m10/images/stand.gif Total energy is: ##3 * k_B T## . Because wave number is 3. Righ?

And all the calculations of density of wave for blackbody is basically counting the number of antinodes. And all of them are same: number of antinode = number of waves = wave mode

Thanks WannabeNewton
 
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  • #6
sawer said:
So if we rewrite this sentence: each "antinode" of a standing wave has an energy of ##k_B T## . Right?

No. Each mode has an energy ##k_B T## from the equipartition theorem. A mode is not the same thing as a node or antinode.

Each mode of the radiation field has associated with it a certain number of nodes. The exact details of how many nodes each mode of the radiation field in the blackbody has are easy to work out so try it yourself.
 
  • #7
WannabeNewton said:
No. Each mode has an energy ##k_B T## from the equipartition theorem. A mode is not the same thing as a node or antinode.

Why not?

If a standing wave has 3 antinodes and we say its mode number is 3. So why is mode not the same thing as antinode?

cavmod.gif

http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/mod6.html

Here it says: "number of modes" per unit frequency per unit volume.

For the first picture: there are 3 standing waves and 5 waves. Now which number is the number of modes? 3 or 5?

It confuses me here, they say: for blackbody radiation, we must calculate the "number of modes".

Number of what? Standing waves, or antinode number of standing wave?

Thanks for help WannabeNewton
 
  • #8
sawer said:
If a standing wave has 3 antinodes and we say its mode number is 3. So why is mode not the same thing as antinode?

Yes the number of antinodes of the standing wave is the same as the mode number but a mode itself refers to one of the independent harmonic oscillator solutions in the Fourier decomposition of the radiation field. The mode has an associated wave number ##k## and with periodic boundary conditions we get standing waves with ##k \propto n## so we can use the mode number ##n## to label a mode and the mode number also reflects the number of antinodes of the standing wave but the mode number ##n## does not mean we have ##n## modes it just means we are in the mode corresponding to ##n##. Therefore each antinode does not have an energy ##k_B T##; it is only each mode that has an energy ##k_B T## again as per the equipartition theorem.

sawer said:
Here it says: "number of modes" per unit frequency per unit volume.

Yes this represents the density of modes in the resonant cavity.

sawer said:
For the first picture: there are 3 standing waves and 5 waves. Now which number is the number of modes? 3 or 5?

Which picture exactly? There are only standing waves of the radiation field inside the resonant cavity so I don't understand the distinction you are making between standing waves and waves. A single mode corresponds to a single standing wave.
 
  • #9
WannabeNewton said:
Yes the number of antinodes of the standing wave is the same as the mode number but a mode itself refers to one of the independent harmonic oscillator solutions

So wave mode refers to one particular frequency of a standing wave and wave number is the number of antinodes of that wave. So wave mode number indicates wave numbers but mode itself indicates frequency. Right? There are many different frequencies of waves(different wave modes), but, one type of mode indicates one frequency. Right? This was what I understood at first when I started to study on blackbody radiation.

But please look at this expression on the picture:

cavmod.gif


"For higher frequencies you can fit more modes into the cavity"

If we replace mode and frequency and rewrite the expression:

"For higher frequencies you can fit more high frequency of wave into the cavity"

It doesn't make sense.

So I began to think for wave mode as a number of antinodes, not as a standing wave of a particular frequency. Because increasing frequency means increasing the antinode number. Now we rewrite the expression again:

"For higher frequencies you can fit more antinode of wave into the cavity" It made sense.

So multiplying the "number of modes per unit frequency per unit volume" by ##k_B T## gives the energy of one standing wave of a particular frequency. so that meant every antinode of a standing wave must have an energy of ##k_B T##.

I think I can explain my confusion now. can you please check again?

What does that mean: "For higher frequencies you can fit more modes into the cavity".

What does "more modes" mean? Doesn't one frequency indicate one mode?
WannabeNewton said:
Which picture exactly?

Sorry, I meant the cavity which is on the right side of the picture. There are 3 standing waves and 2 of them has 2 antinodes one of them just 1.
 
  • #10
sawer said:
So wave mode refers to one particular frequency of a standing wave and wave number is the number of antinodes of that wave. So wave mode number indicates wave numbers but mode itself indicates frequency. Right? There are many different frequencies of waves(different wave modes), but, one type of mode indicates one frequency. Right?

Yes this is all correct.

sawer said:
What does "more modes" mean? Doesn't one frequency indicate one mode?

Yes.

sawer said:
"For higher frequencies you can fit more high frequency of wave into the cavity"

It doesn't make sense.

Yes it doesn't. The article you linked is just worded terribly.

sawer said:
So I began to think for wave mode as a number of antinodes, not as a standing wave of a particular frequency.

I see your confusion and I can see how it can be engendered by the bad wording in that article. But a standing wave of a particular frequency is exactly a normal mode of the radiation field.

sawer said:
What does that mean: "For higher frequencies you can fit more modes into the cavity".

Define ##g(\omega)d\omega## as the number of normal modes of the radiation field in the resonant cavity with frequency in between ##\omega## and ##\omega + d\omega##. Let the cavity by a cube of side length ##L## so that its volume is ##V = L^3##. From the boundary conditions imposed on the independent harmonic oscillator solutions corresponding to the normal modes obtained from Maxwell's equations inside the cavity, we find ##\omega_{n_1n_2n_3} = \frac{c\pi}{L}\sqrt{n_1^2 + n_2^2 + n_3^2}##. Then ##g(\omega)d\omega = \frac{V\omega^2 d\omega}{\pi^2 c^3}##-see if you can derive this from a basic argument; we can divide by ##V## if we wish to get the density of modes per unit frequency per unit volume. So ##g(\omega) = \frac{V\omega^2}{\pi^2 c^3}## by itself represents the density of modes per unit frequency which is why the article you linked is just worded very poorly; what the article should have involved is the quantity ##g(\omega)d\omega## which by definition is the number of normal modes in the frequency range ##\omega## to ##\omega + d\omega##.

I hope that clears things up.
 
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  • #11
sawer said:
Yes I checked.

Linear wave number is L/(λ/2) for a specific frequency. That gives antinode number in a standing wave. So these two must be same thing.
Ah OK.
My dictionary says that the wave number is the number of wavelengths per unit length while the mode is the excitation number of a standing wave ... i.e. on a string.

This a mode is something that standing waves have while wave nuber is quite a different property (check the dimensions) of any periodic wave.

But you are trying to understand Blackbody radiation and you have already had a lot of assistance there so I won't confuse you further by butting in.
 

1. What is the definition of wavenumber?

Wavenumber is a unit of measurement used to describe the spatial frequency of a wave. It is defined as the number of wave cycles per unit distance, typically measured in inverse meters (m^-1) or inverse centimeters (cm^-1).

2. How is wavenumber related to wavelength?

Wavenumber and wavelength are inversely proportional to each other. As wavenumber increases, wavelength decreases, and vice versa. This means that waves with a shorter wavelength have a higher wavenumber and vice versa.

3. What is the difference between wavenumber and frequency?

While wavenumber measures the spatial frequency of a wave, frequency measures the temporal frequency of a wave. Frequency is defined as the number of wave cycles per unit time, typically measured in Hertz (Hz) or cycles per second (s^-1).

4. Why is wavenumber used instead of wavelength in spectroscopy?

Wavenumber is often used in spectroscopy because it is a more convenient unit for measuring the energy levels of molecules. This is because the energy of a photon is directly proportional to its frequency, and since wavenumber and frequency are inversely proportional, wavenumber is also directly proportional to energy.

5. How are wavenumber and wave mode related?

Wavenumber and wave mode are both characteristics used to describe a specific type of wave. Wavenumber describes the spatial frequency, while wave mode describes the pattern or shape of the wave. For example, a wave with a high wavenumber and a sinusoidal wave mode would have a high frequency and a smooth, oscillating pattern.

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