Kiki
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Does a superposed state of an electron exist over a larger amount of space than the state of an electron as a particle?
I don't understand what you mean. Can you rephrase the question?Kiki said:Does a superposed state of an electron exist over a larger amount of space than the state of an electron as a particle?
Kiki said:I am comparing the particle version of an electron to the electron in a superposition of possible states. The particle is assumed to be concentrated in one region and not in a superposition, and the particle has experienced decoherence. On the other hand, the electron described by superposition is mathematically composed of a linear combination of states, and I am wondering if those states are thought to exist over a wider range of space than in the space that the particle exists.
I have in mind the state of a free electron as it travels through space. Such an electron would be in superposition with itself, right?PeroK said:I think you are fundamentally misunderstanding the QM nature of an electron. Do you have in mind the state of a free electron after a measurement of its position?
Kiki said:I have in mind the state of a free electron as it travels through space. Such an electron would be in superposition with itself, right?
I am currently learning QM on my own, yes.PeroK said:That statement makes no sense to me. How much QM do you know? Are you learning it yourself?
Kiki said:I am currently learning QM on my own, yes.
Maybe that statement would make more sense in the context of the double slit experiment for electrons. If one electron travels through a double slit diffraction grating, one of the conclusions from that experiment is that the electron interferes with itself when the electron is not measured.
Double-slit experiment. Sorry for the confusion.PeroK said:Are we talking about a free electron or the double-slit experiment?
One last question: do you have a textbook? If not, what are you using to learn QM?
Kiki said:Double-slit experiment. Sorry for the confusion.
I have David Griffith's Introduction to Quantum Mechanics.
Kiki said:Does a superposed state of an electron exist over a larger amount of space than the state of an electron as a particle?
Kiki said:I have read the first three chapters of Griffiths. I have watched some online lectures from universities as well.
If I remember correctly, decoherence is equivalent to wave function collapse. This decoherence, which is a consequence of measurement, causes a particle to be observed.
In the context of the double slit experiment, before measurement at a phosphorescent screen, the particle is mathematically described by a wave function that is a linear combination of states. One conclusion from the double slit experiment is that the electron must behave like a wave in order for the diffraction pattern to appear at a phosphorescent screen. By definition of a wave, this wave has to take up more space than the particle version of an electron that only travels through one slit.
I would like to know how the wave behavior of the electron is linked to the wave function of the electron -- is the wave function of the electron the same as the wave behavior that must occur in order for a diffraction pattern to appear? If so, I think that would imply the wave function of an electron exists across more space than the wave function for the particle version of an electron.
Kiki said:I still have a question though, what is the "wavelike" behavior of the electron?
Here is a useful reference: http://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/1367-2630/15/3/033018/pdf