De broglie wavelength and lorentz contraction

serp777
Messages
117
Reaction score
6
Am I correct in thinking that the quantum mechanical de broglie wavelength explains relativity's contraction of matter? because lambda = h/p, as the velocity of say a proton increases, the momentum also increases, and the wavelength should get smaller because lim p-->infinity of h/p = 0. At very high velocities near light, the distance between amplitude peaks should shrink very close to the Planck length, and appear as a wall.
 
Physics news on Phys.org
Qualitatively, the de Broglie wavelength indeed shrinks when particle increases velocity. However, this has nothing to do with relativity, because actually the formula for length contraction is

<br /> l_{contracted} = \frac{l_0}{\gamma},<br />

where \gamma=\frac{1}{\sqrt{1-\frac{v^2}{c^2}}}. When the rod is at rest, the rod still has length, l_0, which is a finite number.

The de Broglie formula gives

<br /> \lambda = \frac{h}{\gamma m v},<br />

which is different function of velocity than the length in Lorentz contraction. Also, there is no "proper length" which the particle would have at rest. Rather, if the particle is at rest, there is no wave, or in other words, the wavelength is infinite.

The de Broglie formula is valid even in non-relativistic wave mechanics; so it seems this shrinking of the wavelength is not relativistic phenomenon.
 
I think you would need to consider the effects of both \lambda wavelength and frequency changes with velocity to arrive at the cumulative effect on both length and time metrics.
 
I understand that the world of interpretations of quantum mechanics is very complex, as experimental data hasn't completely falsified the main deterministic interpretations (such as Everett), vs non-deterministc ones, however, I read in online sources that Objective Collapse theories are being increasingly challenged. Does this mean that deterministic interpretations are more likely to be true? I always understood that the "collapse" or "measurement problem" was how we phrased the fact that...
I keep reading throughout this forum from many members that the general motivation for finding a deeper explanation within QM, specifically with regards to quantum entanglement, is due to an inability to grasp reality based off of classical intuitions. On the other hand, if QM was truly incomplete, and there was a deeper explanation that we haven't grasped yet that would explain why particles tend to be correlated to each other seemingly instantly despite vast separated distances, then that...
Back
Top