Modern Physics — Wave-Particle Duality

Quantum mechanical nature of matter and radiation exhibiting both wave and particle properties.

Definition

Wave-particle duality is a phenomenon where under certain circumstances a particle exhibits wave properties and under other conditions a wave exhibits properties of a particle. This fundamental principle of quantum mechanics reveals the limitations of classical physics at microscopic scales.

Light is both wave and particle—not only one. Under certain circumstances a particle exhibits wave properties; under other conditions a wave exhibits particle properties.

Wave vs Particle Nature

Aspect Wave Nature Particle Nature
Shown by Interference, Diffraction, Polarization Photoelectric effect, Compton effect, Black body radiation
Key experiments Double-slit experiment Photoelectric effect, Black body radiation spectrum
Light quanta Continuous wave Discrete packets called photons
  • Wave evidence: Double-slit experiment produces interference patterns (bright and dark fringes). Only waves produce interference.
  • Particle evidence: Black body radiation and the photoelectric effect show light behaves like discrete energy packets.

Comparison: Wave Model vs Particle Model

flowchart LR
    Light["Light"] --> Wave["Wave Model"]
    Light --> Particle["Particle Model"]

    subgraph Wave["Wave Model"]
        W1["Continuous wave"]
        W2["Interference & Diffraction"]
        W3["Spreads out in space"]
        W4["Energy ∝ Intensity"]
    end

    subgraph Particle["Particle Model"]
        P1["Discrete photons"]
        P2["Photoelectric & Compton effects"]
        P3["Localized collisions"]
        P4["Energy ∝ Frequency<br/>E = hf"]
    end

Key Concepts

  • Classical vs Quantum — breakdown of classical physics at atomic scales
  • Blackbody Radiation — thermal emission spectrum from a perfect absorber/emitter
  • Absorptivity Identity: $\alpha_v + \rho_v + \tau_v = 1$ (absorptivity + reflectivity + transmissivity = 1)
  • Blackbody Conceptual Model — idealized cavity with a small hole; radiation depends only on temperature
  • Ultraviolet Catastrophe — classical Rayleigh-Jeans Law predicted infinite intensity at short wavelengths (UV), contradicting experiment
  • Planck's Quantum Hypothesis — energy quantized in discrete packets (quanta); $E = hf$
  • Planck's "Act of Despair" — abandoning the classical assumption that energy is continuous
  • Quantization of Energy — foundation of quantum physics; energy is "pixelated" not continuous
  • Classical Determinism vs Quantum Physics — classical: continuous and predictable; quantum: quantized at smallest scales
  • Photoelectric Effect — light as particles (photons)
  • Photon Energy — $E = hf = \frac{hc}{\lambda}$
  • Photon Momentum — $p = \frac{h}{\lambda}$
  • Compton Effect — photon scattering, momentum transfer
  • De Broglie Hypothesis — matter has wave properties
  • De Broglie Wavelength — $\lambda = \frac{h}{p} = \frac{h}{mv}$
  • Wave Function — $\psi$, probability amplitude
  • Probability Density — $|\psi|^2$, likelihood of finding particle
  • Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle — fundamental limits on measurement
    • Position-momentum: $\Delta x \Delta p \geq \frac{\hbar}{2}$
    • Energy-time: $\Delta E \Delta t \geq \frac{\hbar}{2}$

Key Formulas

Formula Description
$E = hf = \hbar\omega$ Photon energy
$p = \frac{h}{\lambda} = \hbar k$ Photon/matter momentum
$\lambda = \frac{h}{p} = \frac{h}{mv}$ De Broglie wavelength
$K_{max} = hf - \phi$ Photoelectric equation
$\lambda' - \lambda = \frac{h}{m_e c}(1 - \cos\theta)$ Compton shift
$\Delta x \Delta p \geq \frac{\hbar}{2}$ Uncertainty principle
$u(\lambda, T) = \frac{8\pi hc}{\lambda^5}\frac{1}{e^{hc/\lambda kT} - 1}$ Planck's law
$\lambda_{max} = \frac{b}{T}$ Wien's law (peak wavelength, $b = 2.90 \times 10^{-3}$ m·K)
$\frac{P}{A} = \sigma T^4$ Stefan-Boltzmann law ($\sigma = 5.67 \times 10^{-8}$ W·m⁻²·K⁻⁴)
$\alpha_v + \rho_v + \tau_v = 1$ Absorptivity identity

Timeline of Key Experiments

timeline
    title Key Experiments in Wave-Particle Duality
    1801 : Double-Slit Experiment (Young)
         : Interference patterns prove wave nature
    1900 : Blackbody Radiation (Planck)
         : Energy quantization introduced
    1905 : Photoelectric Effect (Einstein)
         : Photon concept proves particle nature
    1923 : Compton Effect
         : Photon momentum confirmed
    1924 : De Broglie Hypothesis
         : Matter waves proposed
    1927 : Electron Diffraction (Davisson-Germer)
         : Matter waves confirmed

Real-World Blackbody Examples

  • Stars (like the Sun) — approximate blackbodies
  • Heated metals — glow and emit thermal radiation
  • The Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) — relic radiation from the Big Bang
  • Black holes — as close to a perfect black body as real objects come

The Ultraviolet Catastrophe & Planck's Solution

The Problem

Classical physics (Rayleigh-Jeans Law) predicted that a hot object should emit infinite energy at short wavelengths (ultraviolet region). Experimentally, intensity increases to a maximum then decreases. This contradiction is the Ultraviolet Catastrophe.

If Rayleigh-Jeans were correct, a toaster would emit lethal UV, X-ray, and gamma radiation.

Planck's "Act of Despair" (1900)

Max Planck abandoned the classical assumption that energy is continuous. He proposed energy is emitted in discrete packets or "chunks" called quanta:

$$E = hf$$

Where $h = 6.626 \times 10^{-34}$ J·s.

Why it worked: At high frequency, energy packets become very large; atoms cannot easily emit them. Therefore radiation decreases at short wavelengths instead of becoming infinite.

Analogy: Energy is not like water flowing smoothly, but like water dropping drop by drop.

Significance

This destroyed the classical belief in continuous energy and introduced the Quantization of Energy — the foundation of Quantum Physics. It killed Classical Determinism and birthed the modern era where everything is "pixelated" (quantized) at the smallest level.

Related Concepts

Course Links