A neutron is confined in space to 10^{-14}m. Calculate the time its packet will take to spread to
(a) four times its original size,
(b) a size equal to the Earth’s diameter, and
(c) a size equal to the distance between the Earth and the Moon.
A neutron is confined in space to 10^{-14}m. Calculate the time its packet will take to spread to
(a) four times its original size,
(b) a size equal to the Earth’s diameter, and
(c) a size equal to the distance between the Earth and the Moon.
Since the rest mass energy of a neutron is equal to m_nc^2=939.6MeV, we can infer the time constant for the neutron from (1.227) \tau=\frac{2mc^2(\Delta x_0)^2}{\hbar c^2}\simeq \frac{2\times 0.5 MeV\times 10^{-12}m^2}{197\times 10^{-15}MeV m\times 3\times 10^8 m s^{-1}} =1.7\times 10^{-8}s, :
\tau =\frac{2m_nc^2(\Delta x_0)^2}{\hbar c^2}\simeq \frac{2\times 939.6 MeV\times (10^{-14}m)^2}{197\times 10^{-15}MeV m\times 3\times 10^{8}m s^{-1}}=3.2\times 10^{-21}s. (1.231)
Inserting this value in (1.226) we obtain the time it takes for the neutron’s packet to grow from an initial width \Delta x_0 to a final size \Delta x(t):
t=\tau \sqrt{\left(\frac{\Delta x(t)}{\Delta x_0} \right)^2-1 }=3.2\times 10^{-21}s \sqrt{\left(\frac{\Delta x(t)}{\Delta x_0} \right)^2-1.} (1.232)
The calculation of t reduces to simple substitutions.
(a) Substituting \Delta x(t)=4\Delta x_0 into (1.232), we obtain the time needed for the neutron’s packet to expand to four times its original size:
t=3.2\times 10^{-21}s\sqrt{16-1}=1.2\times 10^{-20}s. (1.233)
(b) The neutron’s packet will expand from an initial size of 10^{-14}m to 12.7 \times 10^{6}m (the diameter of the Earth) in a time of
t=3.2\times 10^{-21}s\sqrt{\left(\frac{12.7\times 10^{6}m}{10^{-14}m} \right)^2-1 }=4.1 s. (1.234)
(c) The time needed for the neutron’s packet to spread from 10^{-14}m to 3.84 \times 10^{8}m (the distance between the Earth and the Moon) is
t=3.2\times 10^{-21}s\sqrt{\left(\frac{3.84\times 10^{8}m}{10^{-14}m} \right)^2-1 }=12.3 s. (1.235)
The calculations carried out in this problem show that the spread of the packets of microscopic particles is significant and occurs very fast: the size of the packet for an earthly neutron can expand to reach the Moon in a mere 12.3 s! Such an immense expansion in such a short time is indeed hard to visualize classically. One should not confuse the packet’s expansion with a growth in the size of the system. As mentioned above, the spread of the wave packet does not mean that the material particle becomes bloated. It simply implies a redistribution of the probability density. In spite of the significant spread of the wave packet, the packet’s norm is always conserved; as shown in (1.149) \int_{-\infty }^{+\infty }{|\psi (x,t)|^2}dx=\sqrt{\frac{2}{\pi a^2} }\frac{1}{\gamma }\int_{-\infty }^{+\infty }exp\left\{-\frac{2(x-\hbar k_0t/m)^2}{(a\gamma )^2} \right\} dx=\sqrt{\frac{2}{\pi a^2} }\frac{1}{\gamma }\sqrt{\frac{\pi a^2\gamma ^2}{2} }=1, it is equal to 1.