16
5th Solvay Conference, Brussels, 23-29 October 1927 Back row: A Piccard, E Henriot, P Ehrenfest, D Durfee, Ed Herzen, Th De Donder, E Schroedinger E Verschaffelt, W Pauli, Waldo, W Heisenberg, R H Fowler, L Brillouin. Middle Row: P Debye, M Knudsen, W L Bragg, H A Kramers, P A M Dirac, A H Compton, L de Broglie, M Born, N Bohr. Front Row: I Langmuir, M Planck, Mme Curie, H A Lorentz, A Einstein, P Langevin, Ch E Guye, C T R Wilson, O W Richardson.

5th Solvay Conference, Brussels, 23-29 October 1927

  • Upload
    oya

  • View
    79

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

5th Solvay Conference, Brussels, 23-29 October 1927 Back row: A Piccard, E Henriot, P Ehrenfest, D Durfee, Ed Herzen, Th De Donder, E Schroedinger - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

Page 1: 5th Solvay Conference, Brussels, 23-29 October 1927

5th Solvay Conference, Brussels, 23-29 October 1927 Back row: A Piccard, E Henriot, P Ehrenfest, D Durfee, Ed Herzen, Th De Donder, E Schroedinger

E Verschaffelt, W Pauli, Waldo, W Heisenberg, R H Fowler, L Brillouin.Middle Row: P Debye, M Knudsen, W L Bragg, H A Kramers, P A M Dirac, A H Compton,

L de Broglie, M Born, N Bohr.Front Row: I Langmuir, M Planck, Mme Curie, H A Lorentz, A Einstein, P Langevin, Ch E Guye,

C T R Wilson, O W Richardson.

Page 2: 5th Solvay Conference, Brussels, 23-29 October 1927

Postulates of Quantum Mechanics

Every physically-realizable system is described by a state function ψ that contains all accessible physical information about the system in that state

The probability of finding a system within the volume dv at time t is equal to |ψ|2dv

Every observable is represented by an operator which is used to obtain information about the observable from the state function

The time evolution of a state function is determined by Schrödinger’s Equation

Page 3: 5th Solvay Conference, Brussels, 23-29 October 1927

“Weirdness” of QM Things are quantized

– The radius of the Earth’s orbit can’t be changed by an arbitrarily small amount

Waves don’t have to be in one place– Interferometry

More generally – superposition– Schrödinger’s cat

Page 4: 5th Solvay Conference, Brussels, 23-29 October 1927

Thought QuestionI put a cat into an ideal box (one which no

information can flow in or out of) with a bottle of poison. A device in the box will open the bottle and kill the cat when a radioactive atom decays. After the cat has been in the box for a time t, is the cat dead or alive?

A – Yes B – No

Page 5: 5th Solvay Conference, Brussels, 23-29 October 1927

Why do I care? Need it to understand

– Small things (like transistors in computer chips and red blood cells, for example)

– “Degenerate” things (like laser beams and neutron stars)

You can do some interesting things with QM– Quantum computation– Quantum encryption / key distribution

Page 6: 5th Solvay Conference, Brussels, 23-29 October 1927

Notation Atomic number-Z, # of protons in the nucleus

Determines which element it is Neutron number-N, # of neutrons in nucleus Mass number- A=Z+N

AZX

Isotopes—Nuclei of the same element (same Z) with different A (and N) values.

Page 7: 5th Solvay Conference, Brussels, 23-29 October 1927

How many Protons does 263

106Sg have?

A. 263B. 106C. 157D. 42E. I can’t tell because I do not know where Sg

is on the periodic table.

Page 8: 5th Solvay Conference, Brussels, 23-29 October 1927

How many Neutrons does 263

106Sg have?

A. 263B. 106C. 157D. 42E. I can’t tell because I do not know where Sg

is on the periodic table.

Page 9: 5th Solvay Conference, Brussels, 23-29 October 1927

How many electrons does 263

106Sg have?

A. 263B. 106C. 157D. 42E. I can’t tell because I do not know where Sg

is on the periodic table.

Page 10: 5th Solvay Conference, Brussels, 23-29 October 1927

Nuclear Strong Forcea short range attractive force

between nuclear particles Holds the atom together Very short range—almost touching If the distance between two protons

is >10-15 m then the coulomb repulsive force is too strong and the nuclei breaks apart.

Page 11: 5th Solvay Conference, Brussels, 23-29 October 1927

THE TEN VIRGINSThey WERE prepared for the coming of the bridegroom. What they weren't prepared for was . . .

Page 12: 5th Solvay Conference, Brussels, 23-29 October 1927

Radioactive Half Life

Page 13: 5th Solvay Conference, Brussels, 23-29 October 1927

Discussion Question: You start with 1000 dice. Every time you get a six you take it out. How many rolls is a half-life?A. 2B. 4C. 6D. 8E. 10

Page 14: 5th Solvay Conference, Brussels, 23-29 October 1927

If I start with 10000 pennies and every time I toss all the coins I remove the tails, how many tosses does it take to

get down to less than a dollar left?A. 3B. 5C. 7D. 9E. 11

Page 15: 5th Solvay Conference, Brussels, 23-29 October 1927
Page 16: 5th Solvay Conference, Brussels, 23-29 October 1927

For radioactive decay where No

is the number of nuclei you start with and N is the number of nuclei after a time t

toeNN

How do I solve for λ?