Lecture 9
Lecture 9
G. Wentzel, Z. Physik 38, 518 (1926) H.A. Kramers, Z. Physik 39, 828 (1926) L. Brillouin, Compt. Rend. 183, 24 (1926)
as in my conversations with my brother we always arrived at the conclusion that in the case of X-rays one had both waves and corpuscles, thus suddenly - ... it was certain in the course of summer 1923 - I got the idea that one had to extend this duality to material particles
Direct observation of de Broglie wave interference of heavy particles (1 million times heavier than an electron)
Idea:
As we consider heavier particles, the de Broglie wave length is becoming smaller and smaller, then we should be approaching something familiar in classical mechanics, and some approximation can then be made
Justification:
After all, we dont have to use de Broglie waves to describe a
A general argument:
1D Schrodinger equation in x-representation:
is a constant.
If V(x) is varying little over the scale of the oscillation wavelength, then V(x) is almost a constant, so the solution is expected to be like
Working out
and
terms:
terms:
Classical time-independent Hamilton-Jacobi equation! is identified as Hamiltons characteristic function!
terms:
More generally, considering nonzero integration constants and the linearity of the Schrodinger equation:
where coefficients A & B may be determined by boundary conditions, or by matching with some exact solutions (e.g., connection formula).
WKB solution:
At the classical turning points, we got and so the earlier problems because WKB solution diverges!
This ill behavior is somewhat expected, because in constructing the WKB solution, we assumed that the De Broglie wavelength is small. This assumption is violated near the turning points
Fixing the problem by the Connection Formula Idea: near the classical turning points, (i) treat the potential as a linear potential and find the exact solution and (ii) then match WKB solution with this exact solution in the neighborhood of the turning point
E
Neighborhood of
Neighborhood of
From this rule we can find approximate eigenvalues for bound states In 1D smooth potentials. For example, this rule yields the exact energy levels for a harmonic oscillator potential (exercise to be done during lecture )
Summary
Main idea of WKB approximation is that as de Broglie wavelength becomes very small as compared with the scale of the potential, a quasi-classical solution of the Schrodinger equation becomes a very useful approximation. We formally derived a general WKB solution by an expansion in terms of hbar. At classical turning points, the general WKB solution diverges. This divergence problem can be overcome by a connection technique. A useful WKB quantization rule of eigen-energy values associated with 1D smooth potential wells is also discussed.