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If an electron is a wave, what is waving?

So many answers on the internet say "the probability that a particle will be at a particular location"... so... the electron is a physical manifestation of probability? That doesn't sound right.

This page http://mwolff.tripod.com/see.html seems to suggest that the spherical wave pair is what gives the electron the properties of a particle. I could be misinterpreting, but this answer makes more sense to me - if only I understood what was waving!

Qmechanic
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    Y'know, I'm not convinced that the author of that web page you linked to really knows what he's talking about. Sure, you can represent the wavefunction of an electron in an atom (or any bound spherically symmetric system) in terms of spherical waves, but there's nothing particularly magical about that representation as the web page seems to be getting at. – David Z Mar 05 '12 at 04:05

4 Answers4

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In QM, a "wave" isn't what we normally imagine: something that moves up and down and moves in one direction, like water. It's just a function that evolves with time and has a (in general) different value at every point in space. See this applet for some examples of atomic orbitals which are infact electron wavefunctions (the applet actually shows the absolute value squared $|\psi|^2$ of the wavefunction; or the probability density). The wave does not "exist" per se in physical space. It can be drawn (superimposed) on physical space, but that just means that it has a value at every point there.

The wave associated with an electron shows the probability of finding it at a particular point in space. If an electron is moving, it will have a "hump" in its vicinity, which shows it's probability at every point in time. This hump will move just like the electron does. For more info on this (though you may have read stuff like this before), see the "why don't they need to be close" section of this answer. When you observe the electron, you collapse the hump to a peak. This peak is still a wave, just narrowly confined so it looks like a particle.

Your issue is that you're trying to look at the "electron" and "wave" simultaneously. This isn't exactly possible. The wave is the particle. You can look at it as if you exploded the electron into millions of fragments and spread it out over the hump. There is a fraction of an electron at every point. The fraction corresponds to the probability of finding it there. At this point, there is no electron-particle. So there's nothing that's "waving". Of course, we never see a fraction of an electron, so these fellows clump together the minute you try to make an observation.

Edit by OP -- This is the section referenced above that I found most helpful

Quantum mechanics has a nice concept called wave particle duality. Any particle can be expressed as a wave. In fact, both are equivalent. Exactly what sort of wave is this? Its a probability wave. By this, I mean that it tracks probabilities.

I'll give an example. Lets say you have a friend, A. Now at this moment, you don't know where A is. He could be at home or at work. Alternatively, he could be somewhere else, but with lesser probability. So, you draw a 3D graph. The x and y axes correspond to location (So you can draw a map on the x-y plane), and the z axis corresponds to probability. Your graph will be a smooth surface, that looks sort of like sand dunes in a desert. You'll have "humps" or dunes at A's home and at A's workplace, as there's the maximum probability that he's there. You could have smaller humps on other places he frequents. There will be tiny, but finite probabilities, that he's elsewhere (say, a different country). Now, lets say you call him and ask him where he is. He says that he's on his way home from work. So, your graph will be reconfigured, so that it has "ridges" along all the roads he will most probably take. Now, he calls you when he reaches home. Now, since you know exactly where he is, there will be a "peak" with probability 1 at his house (assuming his house is point-size, otherwise ther'll be a tall hump). Five minutes later, you decide to redraw the graph. Now you're almost certain that he's at home, but he may have gone out. He can't go far in 5 minutes, so you draw a hump centered at his house, with slopes outside. As time progresses, this hump will gradually flatten.

So what have I described here? It's a wavefunction, or the "wave" nature of a particle. The wavefunction can reconfigure and also "collapse" to a "peak", depending on what data you receive.

Now, everything has a wavefunction. You, me, a house, and particles. You and me have a very restricted wavefunction (due to tiny wavelength, but let's not go into that), and we rarely (read:never) have to take wave nature into account at normal scales. But, for particles, wave nature becomes an integral part of their behavior. --Manishearth Feb 14, 2012

Manishearth
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  • The applet displays charge densities (i.e., absolute values squared of the wave functions), not the wave functions themselves. – Arnold Neumaier Mar 03 '12 at 16:33
  • Aah good point.. I'll edit that in.. – Manishearth Mar 03 '12 at 16:45
  • It is important when answering questions like this to say that two electrons are described by a wave in 6 dimensions, so that the wave is not in physical space. This usually resolves the confusion. – Ron Maimon Mar 04 '12 at 02:16
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    "Why we don't need to be close" proved to be exactly what I needed. Thanks for the reference. I hope you don't mind, but I want to append a block quote from that answer to yours for completeness. – Brien Malone Mar 05 '12 at 03:33
  • @BrienMalone Fine with me =D . It's better if you do it yourself; I'm not sure exactly how much you want to append. – Manishearth Mar 05 '12 at 03:45
  • The thing about the 6-dimensional space is for two particles (because you have two 3-vector coordinates, $\Psi(\vec{r}_1, \vec{r}_2)$, but it seems like you're talking about a single electron here. So there's no need to mention 6-dimensional space. – David Z Mar 05 '12 at 04:07
  • About that 6-D space: I assume that is 6 complex dimensions equivalent to 12 real dimensions? And what happens if you have three electrons? Does it make a difference if there is an electron, a negative muon and an antiproton instead? – Jim Graber Mar 05 '12 at 10:00
  • @JimGraber I'm not too sure of this, but using David's answer, well, not 12 complex dimensions. The plot would be a plot in 6D real space, that has a complex resultant value at every point. So you'd need 8 dimensions to draw it. 3 electrons $\to$ 9+2 dimensions, etc. Won't make a difference for different particles. Of course, you can add to the dimensions by plotting multiple data on the same graph; i.e the spin or momentum or something. – Manishearth Mar 05 '12 at 10:06
  • Okay, if electron has wave-particle duality, so how can we call something an electron? – Mockingbird Oct 05 '16 at 09:03
  • The big problem with the block-quoted example is that while your knowledge of where your friend is between home and work may be limited, he ACTUALLY exists at every point in time along one specific route between A and B. A particle simply doesn't. This is the issue with classical examples of quantum processes - for an electron, it's not that the wavefunction describes the probability of locating it within an area and it's REALLY at location x,y waiting to be discovered; it's that the act of interaction with another system localizes the interaction itself to a single point. – JPattarini Aug 13 '18 at 14:37
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According to quantum electrodynamics (QED), which encodes the properties of electrons and photons, electrons are excitations of an electron fiueld in the same way as photons are excitations of the electromagnetic field.

The fields wave, and the electrons (or photons), as far as they can be considered to be particles, are localized wave packets of excitations of these fields.

The particle interpretation is appropriate, however, only to the extent that the so-called geometrical optics approximation is valid. This means, in a particle interpretation, you shouldn't look too closely at the details, as then the particle properties become more and more fuzy and the wave properties become more and more pronounced.

But if you just look at quantum mechanics (QM) rather than QED, your question cannot be answered as the wave function is something unobservable, existing only in an abstract space,

What can be given an interpretation in QM are certain things one can compute from the wave function. The stuff of interest to chemists is the charge distribution, given by $\rho(x)=e|\psi(x)|^2$ for a single electron, by $\rho(x)=\int_{R^3} ~dy~ e|\psi(x,y)|^2$ for a 2-electron system, etc.; here $e$ is the electron charge. For electrons in a molecule, nothing is waving here anymore, as the wave aspect is eliminated by taking the absolute values.

Indeed, if this charge density is concentrated in a tiny region, one sees the particle aspect of electrons; if it is very spread out, one sees the wave aspect, revealed by high frequency oscillatory patterns in the charge density.

This is the chemist's interpretation. See Chapter A6:The structure of physical objects of A theoretical physics FAQ.

Physicists (especially if not well acquainted with the use of charge density information) are often brainwashed by the teaching tradition, and then think and express everything in terms of probabilities, giving QM an unnecessary flair of mystery.

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    When the charge is multiplied by the probability density one gets the charge density. This is only true in the limit of large number of particles. Otherwise one cannot interpret that multiplication as a charge density for 1 electron say because it would mean that the electron is an extended object which is not! – Revo Mar 03 '12 at 20:52
  • Electrons in an atom are indeed extended objects. Otherwise you'd have to explain the least number of electrons to make the charge distribution describable by my recipe. There is no such least number. – Arnold Neumaier Mar 03 '12 at 23:05
  • @Revo: The first paragraph in http://www.mat.univie.ac.at/~neum/physfaq/topics/atoms contains the quote of a published statement by a famous physicist (with reference) that explicitly supports my reading of the matter: ''The product of -e and |psi(x)|^2 is usually interpreted as charge density, because the electrons in an atom move so fast that the forces they exert on other charges are essentially equal to the forces caused by a static charge distribution -e|psi(x)|^2.'' – Arnold Neumaier Mar 03 '12 at 23:11
  • A single electron is not a smeared object. Let me quote Feynman: "the wave function of an electron in an atom does not, then, describe a smeared-out electron with a smooth charge density. The electron is either here, or there, or somewhere else, but wherever it is, it is a point charge." He goes on further on explaining this which can be found in http://student.fizika.org/~jsisko/Knjige/Opca%20Fizika/Feynman%20Lectures%20on%20Physics/Vol%203%20Ch%2021%20-%20Schrodinger%20Equation%20In%20Classical%20Context.pdf in section 21-4 (2nd paragraph). – Revo Mar 04 '12 at 04:30
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    Feynman just exposes his beliefs. His belief cannot be checked, as observation changes the picture. My exposition is of the chemist's beliefs, who universally treat electrons as smeared objects. Famous physicists share this much better founded belief, as the citation in the previous comments shows. (Jochen Mannhart is one of the 10 winners of the Leibniz prize 2008, http://www.dfg.de/aktuelles_presse/preise/leibniz_preis/2008/ among others for the achievement that, for the first time, he made pictures of atoms with subatomic resolution possible.) – Arnold Neumaier Mar 04 '12 at 11:36
  • @Neumaier : thanks for your book Classical and Quantum Mechanics via Lie algebras and your answer. – Helder Velez Mar 06 '12 at 17:45
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In QM, the "waves" lie on the Hilbert space, that is not our "real life" space (where we live). All we can do with this "wave", or with this wave vector (that could be called $\psi(x)$ or $|\psi \rangle$, depending on your choice of representation), to make prediction about the properties of a particle (here on your real lifes), like a electron in your question, its to calculate its square modulus:

$|\psi(x)|^2 \mathrm{d}x \equiv P(x, x+\mathrm{d}x) $,

where $P(x, x+\mathrm{d}x)$ is the probability to find the electron between $x$ and $x+\mathrm{d}x$, if you want to measure the position of the electron; the rule above its called the Born Rule.

Well, this said, it's time to go to your question: "If an electron is a wave, what is waving?".

First of all, what determines the wave or corpuscular behavior of your subject of study its the type of experiment that you do; but, the outcomes (the results of the measure process) will always be probabilistic. So, in QM, we "accumulate statistics", to make a histogram and compare with the prediction of the Born rule to the system in question.

Therefore, the electron could be a wave (existence of interference of electrons) or a particle (existence of quantas), depending on what you want to know about it. Both behaviors are complementary, that is, with the two descriptions the properties of the electron can be achieved completely, but the two cannot be measured simultaneously.

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To answer this question, we need to use a new model of the electron.

An electron can be modeled as a tiny charge that revolves at the speed of light in an orbit having the Compton wavelength as a circumference.

To validate this model, you can calculate the current produced by the revolving charge as it passes an observer near the orbit. Using this current and the electron's area, you can calculate the magnetic moment, which is the Bohr magneton, identically.

Also, the mass is trivial to calculate, as is the angular momentum.

Further, the mass is contained in the interior field within the orbital area, not in the charge, so the charge itself is not precluded from revolving at the speed of light. The whole electron as a particle system, however, cannot be accelerated to the speed of light.

As to the question, "What is Waving", an observer near the orbit will experience an impulse each time the charge passes. The impulse from the charge spirals outward at the speed of light with a spacing of a Compton wavelength between succeeding impulses. Hence, this spiraling impulse field of "Compton wavelets" are the entities that are "waving".

It is also to be noted that if you look at the spacings which the wavelets from two approaching electrons cross as the electrons move with respect to one another, it turns out to be the de Broglie wavelength, identically.

Actually, all of this is trivial to model, and so the reader is encouraged to try it.

Finally, we acknowledge that there will be interpretations of quantum mechanical phenomena versus the highly precise structure of this model that will be troubling to some.