You Will Not Tunnel Through a Wall - Comments

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The forum discussion centers on the quantum tunneling phenomenon, specifically addressing the differences in tunneling probabilities between protons and electrons. Participants emphasize that the tunneling of composite particles, such as hydrogen atoms, is significantly more complex due to the distinct charge characteristics of the individual particles. The consensus is that the joint tunneling probability for a proton and an electron is lower than for identical particles, due to their differing transmission probabilities and the requirement for simultaneous tunneling. The discussion concludes that there is currently no experimental evidence supporting the tunneling of whole atoms or molecules.

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ZapperZ submitted a new PF Insights post

You Will Not Tunnel Through a Wall

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Thanks ZapperZ.I have a better understanding now!
 
Good insight article, very well spoken !
 
So I'm not going to tunnel through my chair and into the core of the Earth. Good to know!
 
Does the differencebetween the proton & electron actually make the tunneling probability lower, or just much more difficult to calculate? if so, why?
 
Very nice Insight!
 
maline said:
Does the differencebetween the proton & electron actually make the tunneling probability lower, or just much more difficult to calculate? if so, why?

Look at the difference in the CHARGE! One sees it is a "barrier", while the other sees it as a "well". This means that the transmission probability for each one of them will be different!

This is not an issue of tunneling of individual particles. It is the tunneling of ALL the particles together, simultaneously, and coherently. We have not seen such a thing yet. The best that we have is the tunneling of alpha particles, which is nothing more than a clump of two protons (and notice that each of them making up the composite particle has the same charge and the same charge sign) while the neutrons have no charge.

Until we can show of tunneling phenomenon by whole atoms and molecules, tunneling by macroscopic object is practically impossible at this moment.

Zz.
 
ZapperZ said:
This means that the transmission probability for each one of them will be different!
Would you mind putting in a word about what effect this has on the final probability?
 
maline said:
Would you mind putting in a word about what effect this has on the final probability?

I'm not exactly sure what you are looking for here. One particle has to tunnel through a barrier, while the other one has to "jump" over a "hole in the ground". Is it not obvious that the transmission probability will be different for each one of them?

So if you want just "a word", it is "DIFFERENT"!

Zz (who thinks explaining physics using "a word" is impossible).
 
  • #10
What I'm not getting is why the difference in the separate transmission probabilities necessarily leads to a lower probability that for the transmission of two particles with similar individual probabilities.
Thanks for your patience.
 
  • #11
maline said:
What I'm not getting is why the difference in the separate transmission probabilities necessarily leads to a lower probability that for the transmission of two particles with similar individual probabilities.
Thanks for your patience.

Because they won't get through the barrier with equal probability! Your right hand might go through, but your left hand stayed behind! (Sorry, but I had to resort to THAT ridiculous analogy.) So ALL of you didn't get through the barrier at the same time! To me, the probably of all of you to tunnel through the barrier is then ZERO.

Goodbye left hand!

Zz.
 
  • #12
If they did get through with equal probability, as in the case of alpha particles, how does this increase the probability for them both to get through at once?
 
  • #13
maline said:
If they did get through with equal probability, as in the case of alpha particles, how does this increase the probability for them both to get through at once?

Did you not pay attention to my description of the SIGN of the charges?

Zz.
 
  • #14
I have no problem with the fact that the two individual transmission probabilities are different. But what does this have to do with the joint probability of both particles being transmitted?

p.s. with all due respect, I don't think I'm the one who's "not paying attention" here!
 
  • #15
maline said:
I have no problem with the fact that the two individual transmission probabilities are different. But what does this have to do with the joint probability of both particles being transmitted?

p.s. with all due respect, I don't think I'm the one who's "not paying attention" here!

Then I don't understand why you were using the alpha particle example, especially when clearly it doesn't apply to the "they" in your Post #12, if you are paying attention.

Whether you buy my argument or not, here's a fact: we have no experimental evidence of the tunneling of whole atoms and molecules.

If such an event can't be achieved, then there's no hope of tunneling whole watermelons.

Zz.
 
  • #16
maline said:
I have no problem with the fact that the two individual transmission probabilities are different. But what does this have to do with the joint probability of both particles being transmitted?

p.s. with all due respect, I don't think I'm the one who's "not paying attention" here!
Maline. I would think of it like this. The probability of flipping a coin heads is 1/2. The probability of flipping two heads consecutively is 1/2*1/2=1/4. This is analogous to a the probability of a composite particle tunneling. So if you have an electron that has some probability X of tunneling through some potential barrier, and you have a proton with some probability Y of going through the barrier. Then the composite particle consisting of one electron and one proton will have a probability X*Y of tunneling and since Y<1, X*Y<X. That's what I expect anyway..
 
  • #17
kmm said:
maline said:
I have no problem with the fact that the two individual transmission probabilities are different. But what does this have to do with the joint probability of both particles being transmitted?

p.s. with all due respect, I don't think I'm the one who's "not paying attention" here!
Maline. I would think of it like this. The probability of flipping a coin heads is 1/2. The probability of flipping two heads consecutively is 1/2*1/2=1/4. This is analogous to a the probability of a composite particle tunneling. So if you have an electron that has some probability X of tunneling through some potential barrier, and you have a proton with some probability Y of going through the barrier. Then the composite particle consisting of one electron and one proton will have a probability X*Y of tunneling and since Y<1, X*Y<X. That's what I expect anyway..
I should note, I don't think X*Y is the exact probability of electron and proton tunneling at the same time, but I expect the actually probability to have a similar form.
 
  • #18
Sure, two particles tunneling is less probable than one! But Zapper's statement was that a hydrogen atom is less likely to tunnel than an alpha particle, because of the fact that the proton & electron have different individual transmission probabilities. In your terms, we're comparing X*Y vs Z*Z. With classical probability, it would be completely irrelevant whether X=Y or not. So why is this aspect important here?
 
  • #19
maline said:
I have no problem with the fact that the two individual transmission probabilities are different. But what does this have to do with the joint probability of both particles being transmitted?
Because the condition for success is that you (all of you) pass through the wall. Otherwise, none of you does. You encounter an impassible barrier.

Think of a mesh bag full of dice. Shake the bag, and each die has an individual chance of falling out of the bag.

But imagine if all the dice were stuck together with strands of gooey gum. Now, no die can literally fall out of the bag onto the floor, and the entire glop of dice will never fall out of the bag no matter how long and how hard you shake it. The chance of the entire glop of dice falling through are virtually zero, because it is a the sum of all the individual chances, which is a very small number.
 
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  • #20
Yes, I got all that from the start! But for the seventh time, how does the fact that the individual probabilities are different come into this?
 
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  • #21
maline said:
Does the differencebetween the proton & electron actually make the tunneling probability lower, or just much more difficult to calculate? if so, why?

maline said:
Yes, I got all that from the start! But for the seventh time, how does the fact that the individual probabilities are different come into this?

Are you asking if/why the probability for electron + proton is less than proton + proton or electron + electron?
 
  • #22
Dang. Crossed onto page 2.

@maline, read post #17.
 
  • #23
Drakkith said:
Are you asking if/why the probability for electron + proton is less than proton + proton or electron + electron?
Yes. I thought that was clear.

DaveC426913 said:
@maline, read post #17.
Absolutely, the tunnelings of the two particles are not uncorrelated. That is why I didn't use formulas like X*Y from the beginning. But it remains true that in classical probability, the question of whether two different events (correlated or not) have the same probability has no bearing on the probability of them both happening.
 
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  • #24
@maline I wasn't trying to show that the probability was merely less than one. I was attempting to show why the probability of transmission of the electron is higher than the transmission probability of electron + proton. But I think I see your concern now. In the OP it was stressed that the reason it's tougher to have an H2 molecule tunnel is because the protons and electrons have different probabilities of transmission. I think you understood this as implying that if the protons and electrons had equal probabilities of transmission, they would be more likely to tunnel, and you want to know why. Is that correct?
 
  • #25
sorry, I meant "less than for one particle".
yes, now you got my Q right.
 
  • #26
Does tunneling shift the phase of the wavefunction? Because if it does then the probability of Harry Potter running through the wall of Platform Nine and Three Quarters and retaining coherence (in this independent-particle toy model) would be precisely zero, not zero FAPP. His state would rotate in phase space and he would emerge with a rather different, and probably terminal, configuration on the other side.

Harry could, of course, be thinking about Humpty Dumpty. Where all the King's horses and all the King's men couldn't put Humpty together again, environmental decoherence would give Harry a sporting chance of being recohered - at least sufficiently so to survive. Harry of course can use his wand to impose superselection of favourable outcomes but the rest of us must calculate - as Harry Hill says "What are the chances of that happening?"

But I'm shooting in the dark here as I have a sneaking suspicion that tunneling does not impose a phase shift so we're back to maline's question. Or perhaps more usefully, we should ask can we treat a highly entangled system as a collection of independent particles? Why *does* a tunelling alpha particle stay in one piece? DaveC's answer may apply because of binding energy... So perhaps the scenario of Zapper splinching his left hand is not a viable one.

FAPP, of course.
 
  • #27
Derek Potter said:
Does tunneling shift the phase of the wavefunction? Because if it does then the probability of Harry Potter running through the wall of Platform Nine and Three Quarters and retaining coherence (in this independent-particle toy model) would be precisely zero, not zero FAPP.

Well, FAPP, there is no difference between zero and zero FAPP.
 
  • #28
Drakkith said:
if/why the probability for electron + proton is less than proton + proton or electron + electron?
I hope someone actually addresses the question before the thread gets closed!
 
  • #29
stevendaryl said:
Well, FAPP, there is no difference between zero and zero FAPP.
Then the term FAPP is meaningless FAPP. Thanks for making that clear FAPP.
 
  • #30
Derek Potter said:
Then the term FAPP is meaningless FAPP. Thanks for making that clear FAPP.

I was sort of joking, but I don't see how one can say that any transition that doesn't violate a conservation law has rigorously zero probability, which is what I think you are saying about Harry Potter tunneling. Or maybe it's just a matter of definition--because of the phase differences, the event where Harry Potter is on one side of the wall one moment and on the other side another moment (and the wall remains unbroken) would not be considered "Harry Potter tunneling through the wall".
 
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