Do wave packets really represent a free particle?

In summary, physicists use Gaussian wave packets to represent freely traveling particles, with the group velocity being precisely defined as the velocity of the center of the packets. However, if the position of the particle is not measured, the wave function becomes an expanding spherical wave with an undefined group velocity. This raises the question of whether nature truly knows about traveling, well-defined wave packets. In the quantum field theory, wave packets are used to represent free particles, but in the presence of a potential, the wave packet is destroyed and more complex probability distributions, such as orbitals, are used to describe the particle. This is due to the possibility of particle creation and destruction in relativistic scattering processes.
  • #1
LarryS
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Given a source of electrons, like from an electron gun. Physicists call these freely traveling particles and often use a Gaussian wave packet to represent them with the group velocity being precisely defined as the velocity of the center of the packets. But if we do not measure the position of the particle then we have no idea where the "center of the packet" is and if we do measure the position of the particle then the wave function, because of dispersion, becomes an expanding spherical wave with basically a zero or undefined group velocity.

So does nature really know about traveling, well-defined wave packets?

Thanks in advance.
 
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  • #2
referframe said:
Given a source of electrons, like from an electron gun. Physicists call these freely traveling particles and often use a Gaussian wave packet to represent them with the group velocity being precisely defined as the velocity of the center of the packets. But if we do not measure the position of the particle then we have no idea where the "center of the packet" is and if we do measure the position of the particle then the wave function, because of dispersion, becomes an expanding spherical wave with basically a zero or undefined group velocity.

So does nature really know about traveling, well-defined wave packets?

Thanks in advance.
Is there really such a thing as a 'free' particle ?

A wave packet in a harmonic potential is very lile a classical particle in same.
 
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  • #3
referframe said:
But if we do not measure the position of the particle then we have no idea where the "center of the packet" is and if we do measure the position of the particle then the wave function, because of dispersion, becomes an expanding spherical wave with basically a zero or undefined group velocity.
There is also a third possibility, that we measure both position and momentum, but neither with perfect precision. That's consistent with Heisenberg uncertainty relations, and that's what actually happens in nature. In this way the wave function can be a Gaussian with a finite width in both position and momentum space.
 
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  • #4
Electrons from a gun controlled by applied voltage have centered velocity and centered time of ejection. CRT or Braun tubes prove it.
Something quantum leaving such and such time traveling with such and such velocity do not seem funny to me.
 
  • #5
A free particle is defined as a particle governed by a Hamiltonian in which the potential is 0.

Wave packets do represent free particles, but are not the only wave functions of a free particle.
 
  • #6
atyy said:
A free particle is defined as a particle governed by a Hamiltonian in which the potential is 0.

Wave packets do represent free particles, but are not the only wave functions of a free particle.

So what is it in the model that destroys the wave-packet when in a potential, for example.
 
  • #7
For example, diffusing Gaussian wave packet could represent a free particle and a standing Gaussian wave packet represents a particle in the ground state of harmonic oscillator.
 
  • #8
ftr said:
So what is it in the model that destroys the wave-packet when in a potential, for example.
The statement was that a particle is called free if the potential is zero, not that wavepackets occur only for free particles. A particle which oscillates in a harmonic potential is also represented by a wavepacket.
 
  • #9
For some funny simulations of Schrödinger wave packets in simple step and box potentials, see

http://theory.gsi.de/~vanhees/faq/quant/node33.html

and the following pages.
 
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  • #10
kith said:
The statement was that a particle is called free if the potential is zero, not that wavepackets occur only for free particles. A particle which oscillates in a harmonic potential is also represented by a wavepacket.

I think I misunderstood his sentence, he usually writes in clear english, maybe he was in a hurry.
 
  • #11
vanhees71 said:
For some funny simulations of Schrödinger wave packets in simple step and box potentials, see

So it seems we can take the whole wave to represent the "particle" at least sometimes, right? What is the analog in QFT.
 
  • #12
It's not clear to me what you mean when you say `we can take the whole wave to represent the "particle"'. The clear meaning of a single-particle wave function in non-relativistic QT is that its modulus squared is the probability distribution for the position of the particle at a given time.

In relativistic QT wave packets make only sense for free particle, defining asymptotic free states. That's why one needs QFT to define relativistic QT of interacting particles in a proper way. The reason is that at relativistic scattering energies you always have the possibility that particles get created or destroyed in the process, i.e., you need a formalism that describes reactions, where the particle number changes, and the most convenient description is thus in terms of QFT.
 
  • #13
vanhees71 said:
relativistic QT wave packets make only sense for free particle

That is what I mean, why not think about the wave in ordinary QM the same as relativistic free particle.
 
  • #14
As I said, if you have relativistic particles there's always the chance to create and destroy particles in scattering processes. That's the reason, why already a proper interpretation of a single-particle wave function in an external potential for relativistic wave equations is difficult if not impossible. That's why you need a theory taking the production and destruction of particles in scattering processes into account, and the most simple way to formulate such a theory is quantum field theory.
 
  • #15
ftr said:
So what is it in the model that destroys the wave-packet when in a potential, for example.

An example of a particle in a bound state (i.e. not a free particle) is an electron constrained by the coulombic potential of an atomic nucleus. The probability densities of position are given by more complicated distributions than a simple Gaussian packet. The clouds of electrons in atoms are called orbitals. Their structure is given by solutions of the Schroedinger equation in terms of special functions that have nodes and maxima at positions about the nucleus.
 
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  • #16
vanhees71 said:
For some funny simulations of Schrödinger wave packets in simple step and box potentials, see

http://theory.gsi.de/~vanhees/faq/quant/node33.html

and the following pages.
Also see here for a Gaussian wave packet spreading while bouncing back and forth between the walls of an infinite square well:

http://www.optics.rochester.edu/~stroud/animations/swdecay.html

And a circular orbit wave packet in a Coulomb potential, constructed from several hydrogen energy levels:

http://www.optics.rochester.edu/~stroud/animations/decay.html
 
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  • #17
Mark Harder said:
An example of a particle in a bound state (i.e. not a free particle) is an electron constrained by the coulombic potential of an atomic nucleus. The probability densities of position are given by more complicated distributions than a simple Gaussian packet. The clouds of electrons in atoms are called orbitals. Their structure is given by solutions of the Schroedinger equation in terms of special functions that have nodes and maxima at positions about the nucleus.

Of course, That is well known. My question was in a response to a misunderstanding to what atyy said.
 

1. What is a wave packet and how does it represent a free particle?

A wave packet is a mathematical concept used in quantum mechanics to describe the behavior of a particle. It represents a localized disturbance or "packet" of energy that travels through space. In the context of a free particle, the wave packet represents the probability of finding the particle at a given position and time.

2. Are wave packets real or just a mathematical construct?

Wave packets are a mathematical construct used to describe the behavior of particles in quantum mechanics. They do not have a physical existence, but rather represent the probability of finding a particle at a given position and time.

3. How do wave packets differ from classical particles?

Classical particles are described by their position and velocity, while wave packets are described by their position and momentum. Additionally, classical particles follow a deterministic path, while wave packets exhibit wave-like behavior and have a probability of being found in different locations.

4. Can wave packets be used to describe all types of particles?

Wave packets can be used to describe all particles, including both matter and non-matter particles. However, they are most commonly used to describe subatomic particles such as electrons, protons, and neutrons.

5. How do wave packets evolve over time?

The evolution of wave packets is determined by the Schrodinger equation, which describes how the wave function of a particle changes over time. As a particle moves through space, its wave packet will spread out and become more diffuse, representing the decrease in certainty of its position.

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