Widdekind Posted June 2, 2010 Posted June 2, 2010 When an electron's Wave Function collapses, its average charge density is dramatically & suddenly shifted. Does this create any kind of Electromagnetic Pulse, or other such disturbance ? (Would that require the emission of photons ??) And, if you could get gazillions & gazillions of electrons, all to WF-collapse, all at once, could you create impressive EMP ??
swansont Posted June 2, 2010 Posted June 2, 2010 Only if the superposition involved different energy states. Energy is conserved. 1
Widdekind Posted June 3, 2010 Author Posted June 3, 2010 Wow, so WF-C might emit photons -- like the the "(electron) absorption & cascade" emissions seen in Ionized Hydrogen Regions of the ISM ?
swansont Posted June 3, 2010 Posted June 3, 2010 Wow, so WF-C might emit photons -- like the the "(electron) absorption & cascade" emissions seen in Ionized Hydrogen Regions of the ISM ? Electron recombination is not generally an example of wave function collapse.
Widdekind Posted June 4, 2010 Author Posted June 4, 2010 Perhaps "partial collapse" ? A large, extended, "plane-wave-like WF" (free electron) shrinks & "deflates down", into a localized, confined, spheroidal sort of WF (bound electron). Such roughly resembles WFC in kind, if not degree.
swansont Posted June 5, 2010 Posted June 5, 2010 Perhaps "partial collapse" ? A large, extended, "plane-wave-like WF" (free electron) shrinks & "deflates down", into a localized, confined, spheroidal sort of WF (bound electron). Such roughly resembles WFC in kind, if not degree. Localization generally does not involve an energy superposition. If you have a single energy eigenstate, there will be no photon emission.
Widdekind Posted June 8, 2010 Author Posted June 8, 2010 Localization generally does not involve an energy superposition. If you have a single energy eigenstate, there will be no photon emission. What is an example of localization, within a single energy eigenstate ?
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