Lorentz Transformation of the De Broglie Relation

In summary, the conversation discussed the concept of the DeBroglie wavelength of a particle moving with relativistic speed and how it is affected by a change in reference frame. Different approaches were suggested, but it was concluded that the second approach, using a Lorentz transformation, is more accurate. However, the discrepancy between the two approaches is still not fully understood. The conversation also touched on the relevance of this topic to high school physics and why it was being discussed in a quantum mechanics forum.
  • #1
quantumdude
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Here is a little puzzle that I'm sure I should know the answer to, but my brain is failing me.

Consider a particle with moving with speed [itex]u[/itex] along the x-axis in some frame S. So its (relativistic) momentum is [itex]p_x=\gamma_umu[/itex]. Its DeBroglie wavelength is [itex]\lambda=h/p[/itex].

Now consider the same particle in a frame S' which moves with speed [itex]v[/itex] relative to S in the x-direction. One might expect (naively perhaps) that the DeBroglie wavelength would be length-contracted according to:

[tex]\lambda '=\frac{\lambda}{\gamma_v}[/tex].

Now note that the momentum of the particle in S' is [itex]p_x'=\gamma_v(p_x-vE)=\gamma_v\gamma_um(u-v)[/itex]. If that transformed momentum is substituted into the DeBroglie relation, we get:

[tex]\lambda '=\frac{h}{\gamma_v\gamma_um(u-v)}[/tex].

Clearly there is a conflict. I'm inclined to say that the second formula is correct because it gives an infinite result if S' is boosted to the rest frame of the particle, which is what I would expect.

So the question is, which part of the above reasoning is wrong?
 
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  • #2
I think you need to apply length contraction TWO times. In frame S, the particle has relativistic velocity u. Here you need to apply length contraction for the first time. Then, when going to frame S' with relative speed v wtr to frame S, you apply length contraction for the second time. i did not calculate this, but what do you say ?

marlon
 
  • #3
I think it may be somewhat more complicated. When you change your reference frame, you need to apply a lorentz transformation to the operator momentum.
In that case, I am not sure that the new operator commutes with the previous one (like rotations and spin), therefore having a mometum eigen state in one reference frame does not mean that you have a momentum eigen state in the new frame.

Hope this helps.

Seratend.
 
  • #4
marlon said:
I think you need to apply length contraction TWO times. In frame S, the particle has relativistic velocity u. Here you need to apply length contraction for the first time.

I don't think that's necessary at all. The particle has a speed [itex]u[/itex], so its momentum is [itex]p_x=\gamma_u mu[/itex]. The observer S simply assigns to him a DeBroglie wavelength equal to [itex]\lambda =h/p_x[/itex].
 
  • #5
seratend said:
In that case, I am not sure that the new operator commutes with the previous one (like rotations and spin), therefore having a mometum eigen state in one reference frame does not mean that you have a momentum eigen state in the new frame.

You're definitely right about that. Momentum in one frame looks like momentum and energy in another frame. But that doesn't explain precisely why one of the two approaches above is wrong. I'm 99% certain that the first approach is wrong (the one that uses simple length contraction) but I can't see why. I mean if you plot a wave on a graph and mark off the endpoints of one cycle, and then let the plot zip past you at 0.9c, then for sure those endpoints are going to be a distance apart that is given by the length contraction formula. My question is, what gives?
 
  • #6
Tom Mattson said:
You're definitely right about that. Momentum in one frame looks like momentum and energy in another frame. But that doesn't explain precisely why one of the two approaches above is wrong.

I think that the problem in the first approach is that you consider Re( <x|psi>) to be a scalar (crests and throughs of the real part of the wave function at definite positions in space, so that you can apply length contraction). It doesn't need to be.

cheers,
Patrick.
 
  • #7
Tom Mattson said:
You're definitely right about that. Momentum in one frame looks like momentum and energy in another frame. But that doesn't explain precisely why one of the two approaches above is wrong. I'm 99% certain that the first approach is wrong (the one that uses simple length contraction) but I can't see why. I mean if you plot a wave on a graph and mark off the endpoints of one cycle, and then let the plot zip past you at 0.9c, then for sure those endpoints are going to be a distance apart that is given by the length contraction formula. My question is, what gives?

I have not taken enought time to check that point, but I am almost sure that you may apply the relativistic doppler formulas (longitudinal doppler effect) to the compute the new wavelength.
To recover the relativistic doppler formula, you have to take into account the good events (space, time). (f'= gamma.(1-beta).f for the longitudinal doppler effect and f'=gamma.(1-beta.cos theta).f for other directions)

Seratend.
 
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  • #8
I'm sorry,Tom,but this is typically HS problem in SR...

In S:the massive particle has the speed "u",relativistic momentum [tex] p_{x}^{S}=m\gamma (u) u [/tex] and de Broglie wavelength [tex] \lambda^{S}=\frac{h}{p_{x}^{S}} [/tex]

In S':the massive particle has the speed "u' ",relativistic momentum [tex] p_{x}^{S'}=m\gamma (u') u' [/tex] and the de Broglie wavelength [tex] \lambda^{S'}=\frac{h}{p_{x}^{S'}} [/tex]

,where,as any HS student should know

[tex] u'=\frac{u-v}{1-\frac{uv}{c^{2}}} [/tex]

Daniel.

P.S.What's this doing in QM forum...? :
 
  • #9
dextercioby said:
I'm sorry,Tom,but this is typically HS problem in SR...

You can't just answer a question without taking a dig at people, can you?

In S:the massive particle has the speed "u",relativistic momentum [tex] p_{x}^{S}=m\gamma (u) u [/tex] and de Broglie wavelength [tex] \lambda^{S}=\frac{h}{p_{x}^{S}} [/tex]

In S':the massive particle has the speed "u' ",relativistic momentum [tex] p_{x}^{S'}=m\gamma (u') u' [/tex] and the de Broglie wavelength [tex] \lambda^{S'}=\frac{h}{p_{x}^{S'}} [/tex]

,where,as any HS student should know

[tex] u'=\frac{u-v}{1-\frac{uv}{c^{2}}} [/tex]

No kidding. I guess you didn't notice that that is exactly equivalent to the second of the two approaches I used. But your answer doesn't explain what is wrong with the first approach, which is what I'm asking.

P.S.What's this doing in QM forum...? :

Well let's see, in what course does one learn about the DeBroglie wavelength...?
 
  • #10
Tom Mattson said:
Here is a little puzzle that I'm sure I should know the answer to, but my brain is failing me.

Consider a particle with moving with speed [itex]u[/itex] along the x-axis in some frame S. So its (relativistic) momentum is [itex]p_x=\gamma_umu[/itex]. Its DeBroglie wavelength is [itex]\lambda=h/p[/itex].

Now consider the same particle in a frame S' which moves with speed [itex]v[/itex] relative to S in the x-direction. One might expect (naively perhaps) that the DeBroglie wavelength would be length-contracted according to:

[tex]\lambda '=\frac{\lambda}{\gamma_v}[/tex].

Why...?Your formula is wrong.It doesn't have even have to do with Doppler shifting (as someone wrongly suggested),because no radiation is emitted,nor absorbed.The de Broglie wavelength is an intrinsic property of every material particle (just like spin,mass and charge).Incidentally,for the photon it coincides with the classical radiation wavelength,but the photon is massless (so no Lorentz boosting from rest frame to moving ref.frame).

So,the way the de Broglie wavelength behaves under a change of inertial obsevers in SR is given by the way the momentum of the particle behaves under the same change of inertial observers and that can be seen from the very definition.

I hope u realize there's no contraction,nor dilation.U can's say the de Broglie wave contracts or dilates,right...?

Daniel.
 
  • #11
Tom Mattson said:
I'm 99% certain that the first approach is wrong (the one that uses simple length contraction) but I can't see why. I mean if you plot a wave on a graph and mark off the endpoints of one cycle, and then let the plot zip past you at 0.9c, then for sure those endpoints are going to be a distance apart that is given by the length contraction formula. My question is, what gives?
Tom,
I think the problem is that you are treating the de Broglie wavelength measured by S as if it were an object at rest in S, where it is really only the measured length of that wavelength in S. If S measures a stick moving at speed [itex]u[/itex] to have a length of L, then frame S' (moving as speed [itex]v[/itex] with respect to S) will certainly not measure the length of that same stick as [itex]L/\gamma_v[/itex].
 
  • #12
dextercioby said:
Why...?Your formula is wrong.It doesn't have even have to do with Doppler shifting (as someone wrongly suggested),because no radiation is emitted,nor absorbed.

Yes, I know it's wrong. So far you haven't said anything that explains why it's wrong.

The de Broglie wavelength is an intrinsic property of every material particle (just like spin,mass and charge).

That can't be right. If the DeBroglie wavelength is intrinsic to the particle, then it would depend only on particle species, which it clearly does not. I think you are confusing the DeBroglie wavelength with the Compton wavelength, which really does only depend on particle species.
 
  • #13
Doc Al said:
Tom,
I think the problem is that you are treating the de Broglie wavelength measured by S as if it were an object at rest in S, where it is really only the measured length of that wavelength in S. If S measures a stick moving at speed [itex]u[/itex] to have a length of L, then frame S' (moving as speed [itex]v[/itex] with respect to S) will certainly not measure the length of that same stick as [itex]L/\gamma_v[/itex].

That is completely correct and this is what i meant by not applying the length contraction once. I mean in a frame that moves along with the object, the deBroglie wavelength is lambda, then you will get a length contracted lambda' in frame S. Then you will also get a lambda" when looking from frame S'...these are two different situations... i mean that you need to watch what the eigenlength is and this length is defined when the object is standing still wtr the frame

marlon
 
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  • #14
Tom Mattson said:
Now consider the same particle in a frame S' which moves with speed [itex]v[/itex] relative to S in the x-direction. One might expect (naively perhaps) that the DeBroglie wavelength would be length-contracted according to:

[tex]\lambda '=\frac{\lambda}{\gamma_v}[/tex].
.

This lambda in the RHS corresponds to an object that is NOT standing still wtr to the frame S, hence this lambda cannot be seen as an 'eigen length' (the length in frame S) and thus, the formula for length contraction does not work.

marlon
 
  • #15
Doc Al said:
Tom,
I think the problem is that you are treating the de Broglie wavelength measured by S as if it were an object at rest in S, where it is really only the measured length of that wavelength in S. If S measures a stick moving at speed [itex]u[/itex] to have a length of L, then frame S' (moving as speed [itex]v[/itex] with respect to S) will certainly not measure the length of that same stick as [itex]L/\gamma_v[/itex].

I think you're onto the answer here. I'm playing around with it and I think I'm almost there. It looks like the simple, naive length contraction really should have been a composition of Lorentz boosts. It looks like marlon was on the right track too.

Thanks,

Tom
 
  • #16
marlon said:
That is completely correct and this is what i meant by not applying the length contraction once.

I got that now, thanks. I didn't understand you properly the first time because I was wondering, "why the hell would S have to apply length contraction to find [itex]\lambda[/itex] when he knows the momentum in his own frame??"
 
  • #17
Tom Mattson said:
It looks like the simple, naive length contraction really should have been a composition of Lorentz boosts.
Right. Happens to the best of us.
It looks like marlon was on the right track too.
Yep, but I have to admit that I didn't understand marlon's point at first either. I now see that we were saying the same thing.
 
  • #18
marlon said:
This lambda in the RHS corresponds to an object that is NOT standing still wtr to the frame S, hence this lambda cannot be seen as an 'eigen length' (the length in frame S) and thus, the formula for length contraction does not work.

Yes, but even in that case, things don't work out. The "eigenlength" of the de Broglie wavelength is infinity ! (the de Broglie wavelength of a particle in its own rest frame) So if you could Lorentz transform it as a length, it should turn out to be infinity in any frame, finite length contraction or not, once or twice applied.

The reason is simply that the de Broglie wavelength is a length property of an object that is not a scalar under Lorentz transformations (nor even under Galilean transformations). Psi doesn't transform as a scalar field under (relativistic or non-relativistic) boosts! In the rest frame, it is a constant (infinite de Broglie wavelength). So then, if it were a scalar (under Galilean, or Lorentzian transformations) it would be the same constant, no ?

cheers,
Patrick.
 
  • #19
vanesch said:
The reason is simply that the de Broglie wavelength is a length property of an object that is not a scalar under Lorentz transformations (nor even under Galilean transformations). Psi doesn't transform as a scalar field under (relativistic or non-relativistic) boosts! In the rest frame, it is a constant (infinite de Broglie wavelength). So then, if it were a scalar (under Galilean, or Lorentzian transformations) it would be the same constant, no ?

cheers,
Patrick.

To TOM : i reread my first answer and indeed i should have pointed out more clearly what i meant.

To Vanesch, i agree that psi does not transform as a scalar under ...

But i don't get the second part though. Are you saying that psi is a constant ? I really think i am missing something, so that is why i would like to ask if you would take the effort to elaborate a bit...

thanks

marlon
 
  • #20
marlon said:
To Vanesch, i agree that psi does not transform as a scalar under ...

Yeah, the composition Lorentz boosts didn't work. It's clear that I have to do this quantum mechanically.

But i don't get the second part though. Are you saying that psi is a constant ? I really think i am missing something, so that is why i would like to ask if you would take the effort to elaborate a bit...

[itex]\psi[/itex] is a constant in the rest frame of the particle because its momentum is known with certainty, so its position is totally uncertain.
 
  • #21
What's "psi" and why is it constant...?:confused:

Daniel.
 
  • #22
[itex]\psi[/itex] is the wavefunction (I'm assuming that vanesch is talking about free particles), and it is constant because the momentum is known with certainty to be 0.
 
  • #23
Free nonrelativstic particles,right,if you're talking about the scalar theory of Schrödinger.

Think about solving the Dirac equation.You do it and find the [itex] u,v,\bar{u},\bar{v} [/itex] in the rest frame (where they're not zero,of course) and then (Lorentz) boost the rest frame to a moving frame.

Daniel.
 
  • #24
The deBroglie wavelength is inversely proportional to momentum, which is why we use the wave number, usually denoted as k, a vector. Then, we have the standard invariant, E t - k. x, which says that (E, k) is a normal four-vector. So, the wave length transforms as the inverse of a spatial distance. Thus, (E, n/lam) is a four-vector, where lam is the wavelength, and n is a unit vector in the wave's direction. (Consider hbar=c=1.)
Regards,
Reilly Atkinson
 
  • #25
Tom Mattson said:
[itex]\psi[/itex] is the wavefunction (I'm assuming that vanesch is talking about free particles), and it is constant because the momentum is known with certainty to be 0.

Yes, that's what I meant, sorry if that isn't clear. The de Broglie wavelength is associated to a wavefunction of a free particle, and you can even stay non-relativistic, because even galilean transformations don't work - length should stay the same for small velocities, and it is infinite for 0 velocity (momentum) and becomes a finite length once your particle is moving (or you went to another rest frame. If, for small speeds, the galilean transformation doesn't work, you should not even try the Lorentz transformation.

And the point is that the Schroedinger wave function (which is at the origin of the idea of de Broglie wavelength ; or rather the opposite) is not a scalar, in that to a fixed point x belongs a fixed value psi(x), and that if x = x' - vt, then you have psi'(x') = psi(x+vt) (under galilean transformation). This is not true. With, say, temperature, it would be true, because temperature is a scalar field. But psi isn't. Psi* Psi is, for instance.

cheers,
Patrick.
 
  • #26
Tom Mattson said:
Yeah, the composition Lorentz boosts didn't work. It's clear that I have to do this quantum mechanically.
Yep. Realized this myself just after my last post. (D'oh! :blushing: ) Thanks to Patrick and reilly for clarifying things.
 

1. What is the De Broglie relation?

The De Broglie relation, also known as the De Broglie wavelength, describes the wave-like behavior of matter. It states that all particles, such as electrons and protons, have a wavelength associated with them that is inversely proportional to their momentum.

2. What is the significance of the Lorentz transformation in relation to the De Broglie relation?

The Lorentz transformation is a mathematical formula that describes how measurements of space and time differ for observers moving at different speeds. In the context of the De Broglie relation, the Lorentz transformation allows us to understand how the De Broglie wavelength changes for particles that are moving at different speeds.

3. How does the Lorentz transformation affect the De Broglie wavelength of a particle?

The Lorentz transformation causes the De Broglie wavelength to change based on the relative velocity of the observer and the particle. As the velocity of the particle increases, the De Broglie wavelength decreases, and vice versa. This is known as the relativistic length contraction effect.

4. Can the Lorentz transformation be applied to all types of particles?

Yes, the Lorentz transformation can be applied to all particles, whether they are massive or massless. However, it is most commonly used in the context of particles with mass, such as electrons and protons.

5. How does the De Broglie relation and the Lorentz transformation relate to the theory of special relativity?

The De Broglie relation and the Lorentz transformation are both important components of the theory of special relativity, which describes the behavior of objects moving at high speeds. The De Broglie relation explains the wave-like behavior of matter, while the Lorentz transformation allows us to understand how measurements of space and time change for observers in different reference frames.

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