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Page 1: The Story of the Quantum 量子的故事 張志義 Cheung, Chi-Yee 中央研究院 物理研究所 2009.10.17

The Story of the Quantum

量子的故事

張志義 Cheung, Chi-Yee

中央研究院 物理研究所2009.10.17

Page 2: The Story of the Quantum 量子的故事 張志義 Cheung, Chi-Yee 中央研究院 物理研究所 2009.10.17

In the past century, the progress in physics is tremendous:

Elementary particles, atoms, nuclei, solid states, …, cosmology

Physics Technologies Our lives World

Page 4: The Story of the Quantum 量子的故事 張志義 Cheung, Chi-Yee 中央研究院 物理研究所 2009.10.17

Theory of Relativity (1905):

Structure of space-timeMotion at high speeds

3-d space + time = 4-d space-time

event

C = constantV < C

Page 5: The Story of the Quantum 量子的故事 張志義 Cheung, Chi-Yee 中央研究院 物理研究所 2009.10.17

In everyday life, v<<c, so the effects of relativity is small, and not noticeable.

Energy takes many forms:

sound, light, heat, motion, …

Relativity: matter is also a form of energy

Most condensed – 1kg is enough to lift all human beings into space!

Efficiency of the sun: 1%.

Efficiency of gasoline: 1 million times smaller.

Page 6: The Story of the Quantum 量子的故事 張志義 Cheung, Chi-Yee 中央研究院 物理研究所 2009.10.17

Quantum Theory (1901-1930)

Hydrogen g.s. ~ 0.1 nanometer ~

Physics of the microscopic world Predictions are all correct, but …Underlying physics is controversial!

“Wavefunction”

Atomic nucleus ~ 100,000 times smaller

Page 7: The Story of the Quantum 量子的故事 張志義 Cheung, Chi-Yee 中央研究院 物理研究所 2009.10.17

--- Albert Einstein (1879-1955, German, Swiss, US)

Nobel Prize: 1921

(for photoelectric effect)

“Quantum mechanics: Real black magic calculus”

1999

Page 8: The Story of the Quantum 量子的故事 張志義 Cheung, Chi-Yee 中央研究院 物理研究所 2009.10.17

--- Niels Bohr (1885-1962, Danish)

Nobel Prize: 1922

(for atomic model)

"And anyone who thinks they can talk about quantum theory without feeling dizzy hasn't yet understood the first thing about it."

Page 9: The Story of the Quantum 量子的故事 張志義 Cheung, Chi-Yee 中央研究院 物理研究所 2009.10.17

--- Richard Feynman (1918-1988, American)

Nobel Prize: 1965 (for QED)

“I think I can safely say that no one understands quantum mechanics”

Page 10: The Story of the Quantum 量子的故事 張志義 Cheung, Chi-Yee 中央研究院 物理研究所 2009.10.17

WHY did great physicists have trouble

with Quantum Theory?

(1) Difficulties in mathematics? No!

(2) Didn’t know how to interpret the reality behind? (Philosophy problem.)

Page 11: The Story of the Quantum 量子的故事 張志義 Cheung, Chi-Yee 中央研究院 物理研究所 2009.10.17

The Quantum Revolution:

Began 1901: Max Planck (German, 1858-

1947)

Nobel Prize: 1918

Ended 1930: Paul Dirac (English,1902-1984)

Nobel Prize: 1933

Page 12: The Story of the Quantum 量子的故事 張志義 Cheung, Chi-Yee 中央研究院 物理研究所 2009.10.17

George Gamow (1904-1968, Ukrainian, US)

1948: CMB T~ Expt. 2.7 K (1965)

Alpha-Bethe-Gamow Theory

1965

Mr. Tompkins in WonderlandMr. Tompkins Explores the Atomic World

Hubble 1929

Page 13: The Story of the Quantum 量子的故事 張志義 Cheung, Chi-Yee 中央研究院 物理研究所 2009.10.17

2006 2008

Page 14: The Story of the Quantum 量子的故事 張志義 Cheung, Chi-Yee 中央研究院 物理研究所 2009.10.17

Physics at the end of 19th century

Issac Newton (1643-1727)

1687: Principia (Philosophiae Naturalis Principia

Mathematica)

Alexander Pope: “Nature and nature's laws lay hid in night;

God said "Let Newton be" and all was light.”

Page 15: The Story of the Quantum 量子的故事 張志義 Cheung, Chi-Yee 中央研究院 物理研究所 2009.10.17

(1) Every object in a state of uniform motion tends to remain in that state of motion unless an external force is applied to it

(2) F=Ma

(3) Action and reaction are equal and opposite

+

Law of Universal Gravity: F=GMm/r2

Page 16: The Story of the Quantum 量子的故事 張志義 Cheung, Chi-Yee 中央研究院 物理研究所 2009.10.17

Leonhard Euler (1707-1783, Swiss)

Joseph-Louis Lagrange(1736-1813, Italian French)

Pierre-Simon Laplace(1749-1827, French)

William Hamilton(1805-1865, Irish)

Page 17: The Story of the Quantum 量子的故事 張志義 Cheung, Chi-Yee 中央研究院 物理研究所 2009.10.17

A mechanical, deterministic world view:

Laplace (~1800): A being equipped with unlimited

computational power, and given complete knowledge of the positions and momenta of all particles at one instance of time, could use Newton’s equation to predict the future and retrodict the past of the whole universe with certainty.

Page 19: The Story of the Quantum 量子的故事 張志義 Cheung, Chi-Yee 中央研究院 物理研究所 2009.10.17

Statistical mechanics:

Ludwig Boltzmann (1844-1906, Austrian)

--- Boltzmann equation (1872)

--- (1877)

Willard Gibbs (1839-1903, American)

--- Gibbs ensembles (1876)

Page 20: The Story of the Quantum 量子的故事 張志義 Cheung, Chi-Yee 中央研究院 物理研究所 2009.10.17

James Maxwell (1831-1879)“Treatise on Electricity and Magnetism” (1873)

Maxwell’s equations (1864):--- Unification of Electricity

and Magnetism

--- Maxwell eq. wave equation

wave velocity=speed of light

Light is electromagnetic wave

Page 21: The Story of the Quantum 量子的故事 張志義 Cheung, Chi-Yee 中央研究院 物理研究所 2009.10.17

Thus, at 1900, it seems that the classical theories of Newton and Maxwell are able to explain everything on earth and in the sky.

Well, almost …

Cracks in classical physics:

(1) Blackbody radiation

(2) Photoelectric effect

(3) Spectrum of hydrogen

Page 22: The Story of the Quantum 量子的故事 張志義 Cheung, Chi-Yee 中央研究院 物理研究所 2009.10.17

Nature of Light: Particle or wave?

Newton: Particle(1643-1727, English)

Christiaan Huygens: Wave(1629-1695, Dutch)

Page 23: The Story of the Quantum 量子的故事 張志義 Cheung, Chi-Yee 中央研究院 物理研究所 2009.10.17

Thomas Young (1773-1829, English)

“The last person who knows everything”(1) Double slit (1801)

(2) Young’s Modulus

(3) Vision of color

(4) Translation of Rosetta stone (1819)http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Young_%28scientist%29

Page 25: The Story of the Quantum 量子的故事 張志義 Cheung, Chi-Yee 中央研究院 物理研究所 2009.10.17

Double-slit experiment

x

Page 26: The Story of the Quantum 量子的故事 張志義 Cheung, Chi-Yee 中央研究院 物理研究所 2009.10.17

Particles Waves

Page 27: The Story of the Quantum 量子的故事 張志義 Cheung, Chi-Yee 中央研究院 物理研究所 2009.10.17

Waves:

Page 28: The Story of the Quantum 量子的故事 張志義 Cheung, Chi-Yee 中央研究院 物理研究所 2009.10.17

Black-body radiation

A blackbody is a theoretical object which absorbs radiation of all wavelengths. (Reflects nothing, therefore black)

(Jean-RayleighUltraviolet catastrophe)

Black-bodyTemp = T

Page 29: The Story of the Quantum 量子的故事 張志義 Cheung, Chi-Yee 中央研究院 物理研究所 2009.10.17

Birth of the quantum

Max Planck (1858-1947, German)

(1901, Berlin)

Nobel Prize: 1918

So, light is particle!

But Planck did not believe ithimself: ”just a formal assumption…”

Page 30: The Story of the Quantum 量子的故事 張志義 Cheung, Chi-Yee 中央研究院 物理研究所 2009.10.17

(2) Photoelectric effect (first observed 1839 by Becquerel )

Critical frequencyBelow: no emission, no matter how intenseAbove: emission, even weak

Page 31: The Story of the Quantum 量子的故事 張志義 Cheung, Chi-Yee 中央研究院 物理研究所 2009.10.17

Albert Einstein (1879-1955, German, Swiss, US)

1905 (annus mirabilis, year of wonders)

(1) Brownian motion(2) Photoelectric effect(3) Special relativity

Note: In 1905, he was a third-class examiner in the Patent Office in Berne, i.e., an amateur physicist!

Page 32: The Story of the Quantum 量子的故事 張志義 Cheung, Chi-Yee 中央研究院 物理研究所 2009.10.17

Explanation of photoelectric effect

W = Work function

= Minimum energy needed to kick out an electron

Therefore, if E < W, no electron at all

if E > W, some electrons, no matter how

dim is the light

Again, light is particle, not wave!

Page 33: The Story of the Quantum 量子的故事 張志義 Cheung, Chi-Yee 中央研究院 物理研究所 2009.10.17

Spectrum of Hydrogen

Johann Balmer (1825-1898, Swiss)

Bamler Series (1885):

No one cared much about this result in 1885, because no one knew what atoms are!

Page 34: The Story of the Quantum 量子的故事 張志義 Cheung, Chi-Yee 中央研究院 物理研究所 2009.10.17

Note:

Electron (1897): J. J. Thomson

(1856-1940, English)

Nobel prize: 1906

Nucleus (1911): Ernest Rutherford (1871-1937, NZ, English) Nobel prize: 1908 (Chemistry, radioactivity of atoms

alpha, beta rays)

Page 35: The Story of the Quantum 量子的故事 張志義 Cheung, Chi-Yee 中央研究院 物理研究所 2009.10.17

Atomic model

Electron:

J. J. Thomson, 1897

Nucleus:

E. Rutherford, 1911

plum pudding model

Problem: circulating electron radiates!How does one stabilize the atom?

Page 36: The Story of the Quantum 量子的故事 張志義 Cheung, Chi-Yee 中央研究院 物理研究所 2009.10.17

The Bohr atom (1913)

--- Niels Bohr (1885-1962, Danish)

Nobel Prize: 1922

(for atomic structure)

Semi-classical model of H atom: ad hoc rules, not theory

Page 37: The Story of the Quantum 量子的故事 張志義 Cheung, Chi-Yee 中央研究院 物理研究所 2009.10.17

1914, Bohr became famous after the success of his atomic model, and the Royal Danish Academy of Science gave him financial support to set up an Physics Institute.

The fund was actually donated by Carlsberg Brewery (beer)!

The Institute quickly became the center of quantum science in the 1920s and 1930s, due to Bohr’s genius and his personality.

Page 38: The Story of the Quantum 量子的故事 張志義 Cheung, Chi-Yee 中央研究院 物理研究所 2009.10.17

Birth of Quantum Theory (1925)

Werner Heisenberg (1901-1976, German)Nobel Prize: 1932

Matrix Mechanics:

Matrices:

p and x are represented as matrices of infinite dimension

Page 39: The Story of the Quantum 量子的故事 張志義 Cheung, Chi-Yee 中央研究院 物理研究所 2009.10.17

Wave Mechanics (precursor)

1924: Louis de Broglie (1892-1987, French) Nobel Prize: 1929

Ph.D. thesis: Electron as wave

If undulating light has particle nature, may be

particles like electrons have wave properties too!

Page 40: The Story of the Quantum 量子的故事 張志義 Cheung, Chi-Yee 中央研究院 物理研究所 2009.10.17

Wave Mechanics (1926) (a few months after Heisenberg)

Erwin Schrodinger (1887-1961, Austrian)Nobel Prize: 1933

Schrodinger Equation: The state of a particle is represented by a “wavefunction” which satisfies

Page 41: The Story of the Quantum 量子的故事 張志義 Cheung, Chi-Yee 中央研究院 物理研究所 2009.10.17

Note: • 1925: Heisenberg was recuperating in a North

Sea island after an severe attack of hay fever. (summer, 1925)

• 1926: Schrodinger was recuperating in Arosa (a Swiss 1700m alpine resort) due to suspected tuberculosis, in the company of a girlfriend.

(Christmas, 1925- early 1926)

(The identity of the lady of Arosa was never known Schrodinger’s diary of 1925 has disappeared.)

Page 42: The Story of the Quantum 量子的故事 張志義 Cheung, Chi-Yee 中央研究院 物理研究所 2009.10.17

Max Born (1882-1970, German) Nobel Prize: 1954

Paul Dirac (1902-1984, English) Nobel Prize: 1933

Theories of Heisenberg and Schrodinger are in fact equivalent!

Page 43: The Story of the Quantum 量子的故事 張志義 Cheung, Chi-Yee 中央研究院 物理研究所 2009.10.17

Relativistic quantum mechanics(Schrodinger equation + special relativity)

Paul Dirac (1928)

Dirac equation - Describes correctly the spin of the electron

But…It has negative energy solutions!

Page 44: The Story of the Quantum 量子的故事 張志義 Cheung, Chi-Yee 中央研究院 物理研究所 2009.10.17

Dirac:

All the negative levels have already been occupied by other electrons!

Pauli principle then excludes other electrons from these levels.

(1) One-body becomes many-body…

(2) Is the negative electron sea observable?

Page 45: The Story of the Quantum 量子的故事 張志義 Cheung, Chi-Yee 中央研究院 物理研究所 2009.10.17

Dirac predicts: antiparticle (In the old days, physicists are much more conservative at proposing new particles.)

In 1932 Carl Anderson found positron(1905-1991; Nobel prize: 1936)

Dirac said yes!

Page 46: The Story of the Quantum 量子的故事 張志義 Cheung, Chi-Yee 中央研究院 物理研究所 2009.10.17

So, if one is clever enough…

One can often turn a crisis into success!

Story: Dirac and fishes

Page 47: The Story of the Quantum 量子的故事 張志義 Cheung, Chi-Yee 中央研究院 物理研究所 2009.10.17

Nobel Prizes:

1932: W. Heisenberg

"for the creation of QM…"

1933: E. Schrodinger and P. Dirac

"for the discovery of new productive forms of atomic theory"

Prizes conferred in the same year 1933 (no prize given in 1931 and 1932)

Page 48: The Story of the Quantum 量子的故事 張志義 Cheung, Chi-Yee 中央研究院 物理研究所 2009.10.17

W. Pauli: Heisenberg over Schrodinger(1) Matrix mechanics precedes wave mechanics.

(2) Matrix mechanics is more original, for wave mechanics relies on the idea of de Broglie.

A. Einstein: Schrodinger over Heisenberg “I have the impression that the concepts created by

him (Schrodinger) will extend further than those of Heisenberg.”

Page 49: The Story of the Quantum 量子的故事 張志義 Cheung, Chi-Yee 中央研究院 物理研究所 2009.10.17

Heisenberg:

Schrodinger:

Given the choice, which would you choose?

Page 50: The Story of the Quantum 量子的故事 張志義 Cheung, Chi-Yee 中央研究院 物理研究所 2009.10.17

As we shall see, the physical principle presented by QM is so revolutionary that it totally changed our understanding of nature forever!

Deterministic vs Probabilistic (classical) (quantum)

Page 51: The Story of the Quantum 量子的故事 張志義 Cheung, Chi-Yee 中央研究院 物理研究所 2009.10.17

(1) Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle

(2) Superposition Principle

However, QM itself needs an interpretation itself! Why?

Quantum mechanics so successful that it can explain all quantum phenomena!

Page 52: The Story of the Quantum 量子的故事 張志義 Cheung, Chi-Yee 中央研究院 物理研究所 2009.10.17

What is this thing called wavefunction?

Copenhagen Interpretation (1927):

Heisenberg BohrMax Born

Page 53: The Story of the Quantum 量子的故事 張志義 Cheung, Chi-Yee 中央研究院 物理研究所 2009.10.17

(1) = Probability density

(3) Measurement (or disturbance) causes wavefunction collapse.

Remember: Newtonian mechanics is deterministic!Probability occurs in Newtonian mechanics Too, but in a different context, e.g. dice

Probability =

(2)

Page 54: The Story of the Quantum 量子的故事 張志義 Cheung, Chi-Yee 中央研究院 物理研究所 2009.10.17

Double-slit experiment with electron:

An electron is interfering with itself, not with other electrons!

Electrons: C. Jonsson (Tubingen, Germany, 1961)Single electron: P. G. Merli et al. (Bologna, Italy, 1974)Single electron: A. Tonomura et al. (Hitachi, Japan, 1989)

Like dice

Tonomura et al. (1989)

Page 55: The Story of the Quantum 量子的故事 張志義 Cheung, Chi-Yee 中央研究院 物理研究所 2009.10.17

Double-slit experiment:

Feynman:

“…a phenomenon which is absolutely impossible to explain in any classical way, and which has in it the heart of quantum mechanics. In reality, it contains the only mystery.”

Page 56: The Story of the Quantum 量子的故事 張志義 Cheung, Chi-Yee 中央研究院 物理研究所 2009.10.17

Wave or Particle?

Copenhagen (Bohr, Heisenberg, Born):

--- depends on how you observe it, before observation, it is just a quantum state represented by .

Not acceptable to many people!

Page 57: The Story of the Quantum 量子的故事 張志義 Cheung, Chi-Yee 中央研究院 物理研究所 2009.10.17

Source of the trouble: Quantum particles do not have deterministic

trajectories like classical ones. (Counterintuitive!)

So physical process cannot be understood in intuitive terms.

In the double-slit experiment, the photon/electron must go through both slits in order to form interference pattern.

Page 58: The Story of the Quantum 量子的故事 張志義 Cheung, Chi-Yee 中央研究院 物理研究所 2009.10.17

If one tries to find out which way it goes, then no interference pattern will be seen, because…

Disturbance due to measurement causes

“wavefunction collapse”

But how does it happen?No answer from the Copenhagen School

Page 59: The Story of the Quantum 量子的故事 張志義 Cheung, Chi-Yee 中央研究院 物理研究所 2009.10.17

Superposition: If there are two routes by which you can go home, then you could actually go home via both routes!

Measurement: However if someone tries to find out which way you take, then they will find you on one and only one of the routes.

In everyday language:

Page 60: The Story of the Quantum 量子的故事 張志義 Cheung, Chi-Yee 中央研究院 物理研究所 2009.10.17

Einstein is very upset by the CopenhagenInterpretation:

(1) God does not play dice!(2) Is the moon there when no one is looking at it?

Einstein & Bohr, debating QM (1920s)

Hot and long debates with Bohr et al.

Page 61: The Story of the Quantum 量子的故事 張志義 Cheung, Chi-Yee 中央研究院 物理研究所 2009.10.17

(1) One of the founders of the quantum concept

(2) A first, thought there must be something wrong with the quantum theory.

(3) After much debate with Bohr, he finally was convinced that QM gives correct results, but it could not be the final theory. It is incomplete!

Einstein:

Page 62: The Story of the Quantum 量子的故事 張志義 Cheung, Chi-Yee 中央研究院 物理研究所 2009.10.17

Einstein’s last attack on QM:

Einstein, Podolsky and Rosen (1935):

“Can quantum-mechanical description of physical reality be considered complete?

Page 63: The Story of the Quantum 量子的故事 張志義 Cheung, Chi-Yee 中央研究院 物理研究所 2009.10.17

EPR:“if, without in any way disturbing a system, we can predict with certainty the value of a physical quantity, then there exists an element of physical reality corresponding to this physical quantity.”

EPR Paradox: Issue unsolved!

Two-body superposition: spin-up, spin-down

“Entangled state”

Page 64: The Story of the Quantum 量子的故事 張志義 Cheung, Chi-Yee 中央研究院 物理研究所 2009.10.17

Schrodinger was also not satisfied with the probabilistic interpretation…

He told Bohr in Copenhagen in 1926

“If we are still going to have to put up with these damned quantum jumps, I am sorry that I ever had anything to do with quantum theory.”

“The Part and the Whole”W. Heisenberg

Page 65: The Story of the Quantum 量子的故事 張志義 Cheung, Chi-Yee 中央研究院 物理研究所 2009.10.17

Schrodinger’s Cat (1935, after EPR)

Page 66: The Story of the Quantum 量子的故事 張志義 Cheung, Chi-Yee 中央研究院 物理研究所 2009.10.17

Bohr: “No phenomenon is a phenomenon until it is

an observed phenomenon” (…rephrased by John Wheeler)

Einstein: “You believe in a dice-playing God and I in

perfect laws in the world of things existing as real objects, …”

Bohr: Before observation, one cannot attribute classical qualities to the particle.

Page 67: The Story of the Quantum 量子的故事 張志義 Cheung, Chi-Yee 中央研究院 物理研究所 2009.10.17

What is reality?

Is an electron in a state of

reality?

But this is philosophy!

Page 68: The Story of the Quantum 量子的故事 張志義 Cheung, Chi-Yee 中央研究院 物理研究所 2009.10.17

Hidden Variables?

Reasonable hidden variable theories are shown to be not possible!

Page 69: The Story of the Quantum 量子的故事 張志義 Cheung, Chi-Yee 中央研究院 物理研究所 2009.10.17

John Bell (1964):

If 1 and 2 are separated by large distance, then measurement done on 1 should not affect that done on 2.

A. Aspect (1982):

Experiments show that that is not the case!

There is influence! In fact, it seems to be faster than the speed of light!

Page 70: The Story of the Quantum 量子的故事 張志義 Cheung, Chi-Yee 中央研究院 物理研究所 2009.10.17

Many-worlds interpretation (Multiverse)

Hugh Everett (1957)

Each line represents a history of particle or even person

Page 71: The Story of the Quantum 量子的故事 張志義 Cheung, Chi-Yee 中央研究院 物理研究所 2009.10.17

R. Feynman:

“We cannot make the mystery go away by ‘explaining’ how it works. We will just tell you how it work.”

In other words, it is a black box.

“I think I can safely say that no one understands quantum mechanics”

Page 72: The Story of the Quantum 量子的故事 張志義 Cheung, Chi-Yee 中央研究院 物理研究所 2009.10.17

Actually, after 1930’s, most physicists just accepted the quantum theory as an useful tool, and did not worry too much about the interpretation problem.

And by doing so, tremendous progresses have been made in many areas of physics:

elementary particles, atom, nucleus, solid-state, …, cosmology

~1,000 terms, improvement needs >10,000 more terms (2006/11/3)

Page 73: The Story of the Quantum 量子的故事 張志義 Cheung, Chi-Yee 中央研究院 物理研究所 2009.10.17

Novel applications of a particle’s quantum nature:

(1) Uncertainty and wavefunction collapse Quantum cryptography (1970, 1980’s)

(2) Wavefunction superposition

Quantum computing (1990’s)

Classical bit

Quantum bit (qubit)

Page 74: The Story of the Quantum 量子的故事 張志義 Cheung, Chi-Yee 中央研究院 物理研究所 2009.10.17

Conclusion

QM is the most successful theory we knowIt is a very useful tool

However the mystery of the quantum remains with us today as much as in 1920s

No breakthrough is in sight, but …

Maybe none is needed.Maybe, that is the way it is!

And maybe, you will find one!