Basic Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle

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Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around the application of the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle to determine the average height at which an electron floats above a tabletop. Participants are exploring how to derive an expression for this height in terms of mass and gravitational acceleration.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Conceptual clarification, Mathematical reasoning, Assumption checking

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • One participant attempts to derive the average height using the relationship between force and momentum, but questions arise regarding the dimensional consistency of the resulting expression. Others suggest alternative methods involving energy minimization and constraints from the uncertainty principle.

Discussion Status

Participants are actively engaging with each other's reasoning, with some providing feedback on the validity of approaches. There is a recognition of multiple interpretations and methods to tackle the problem, but no consensus has been reached on a definitive solution.

Contextual Notes

Some participants express concern about the complexity of the problem in relation to their exam preparations, indicating a high-stakes context for the discussion. There are also mentions of varying answers and the potential for different interpretations of the problem.

the keck
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Homework Statement



According the the Uncertainty Principle, an electron of mass m when placed on a 'flat' tabletop will actually 'float' above the table i.e. the vertical position of the electron will be spread out over some distance.

Use the uncertainty principle to find an expression for the equilibrium average height that the electron floats above the table's surface in terms of m,g etc...

Homework Equations



delta(p) x delta (y) >= h/(4*Pi)

The Attempt at a Solution



I used the fact that F=mg=dp/dt and hence delta(p)= mg x delta(t)

Hence delta (y) >= h/(4*Pi*mg*delta(t))

Thus in determining the average height, the delta(t) will cancel, leaving us with :

Average y = h/(4*Pi*mg)

This however seems to be too easy a solution even though unit analysis verifies that it gives us distance.

N.B. I have used both * and x to refer to multiplication

Regards,
The Keck
 
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the keck said:

Homework Statement



According the the Uncertainty Principle, an electron of mass m when placed on a 'flat' tabletop will actually 'float' above the table i.e. the vertical position of the electron will be spread out over some distance.

Use the uncertainty principle to find an expression for the equilibrium average height that the electron floats above the table's surface in terms of m,g etc...

Homework Equations



delta(p) x delta (y) >= h/(4*Pi)


The Attempt at a Solution



I used the fact that F=mg=dp/dt and hence delta(p)= mg x delta(t)

Hence delta (y) >= h/(4*Pi*mg*delta(t))

Thus in determining the average height, the delta(t) will cancel, leaving us with :

Average y = h/(4*Pi*mg)
How did you get that?:confused:
This does not have the dimensions of a distance.

The steps before that last equation were ok, I don't see how you got this last expression.

PS: welcome to the forums!
 
Yeah, I don't follow the logic at all. I'm used to problems like this being treated as energy minimization problems. Ie minimize kinetic plus potential energy:

p^2/(2m)+mgy

subject to the constraint py>=h/(4*pi). This doesn't seem to be the same thing...
 
Yeah...Sorry about that guys, I had a look at the dimensional analysis again, and realized that it doesn't match.

So how do I actually do it? I'm not exactly sure how one determines the average equilibrium average position.

Thanks

Regards.
The Keck
 
I already pointed this out, but minimize p^2/(2*m)+mgy subject to the constraint of the uncertainty principle (where p and y are 'average equilibrium' values and ought to be roughly the same as \Delta x and \Delta p). Don't worry about being terribly exact about defining things like 'average equilibrium' - this is an estimate, not an exact calculation.
 
Last edited:
who the hell are u guys?

r u guys university students or school students ?
im just worried . . I am preparing for one of the toughest exams in the world and couldn't solve that one . . . https://www.physicsforums.com/images/smilies/surprised.gif
 
Last edited by a moderator:
12thee said:
r u guys university students or school students ?
im just worried . . I am preparing for one of the toughest exams in the world and couldn't solve that one . . . https://www.physicsforums.com/images/smilies/surprised.gif

I suspect everybody who posts here may give you a different answer.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Indeed, there are a variety of ways to obtain the answer. The answer one gets will vary by 0.1-0.5 mm, but as long as the unit analysis is correct, then I doubt they can really mark you down...if you provide valid reasoning.

Dick's method is the one I used, and is quite valid. Thanks a lot!

Regards,
The Keck
 
  • #10
From the uncertainty principle you can write
(delta y)*(delta p)~hbar/2
You can also write (delta p)~squire root{2m(delta E)}
You can also put (delta E)~mg(delta y)
From these relations you can have

(delta y)~((hbar)^{2/3})/(2m^{2/3} g^{1/3})

Shyamal Biswas
 

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