Suppose, just to set some context, that we are dealing with a classic rectangular potential barrier, in one dimension. Now consider the following two possibilities:
A particle comes from the left of the system (e.g. an electron), what are the solutions for the system, the wavefunction of the particle, the probability current, the transmission coefficient, etc.
A particle beam comes from the left of the system (e.g. a beam of electron), what are the solutions for the system, the wavefunction, the probability current, the transmission coefficient, etc.
My question is: what changes between these two scenarios? (Can we even define a wavefunction or a probability current for a particle beam?)
I have no problem treating a single particle, but I have no idea on how to treat a beam.
But from what I saw, from my lecture notes, it seems that the resolution is almost identical in these two cases, but I don't get why. Seems to me that a particle beam should be treated as a collection of particles; instead in my lecture notes it simply gets its wave function like it was a single particle.