Quantum Physics

Overview

Quantum physics developed when classical physics could no longer explain several microscopic phenomena involving light, electrons, and atoms.

Important ideas include:

  • energy quantisation
  • photons
  • wave-particle duality
  • atomic energy levels
  • uncertainty principle
  • X-rays and photon interactions

This topic serves as the master overview hub linking:

Core Ideas

  • some physical quantities are quantised rather than continuous
  • light can behave as photons
  • the photoelectric effect supports the photon model
  • matter and light both show wave-particle duality
  • atomic spectra arise from quantised energy levels
  • uncertainty sets limits on simultaneous precision
  • X-ray production combines electron acceleration with photon emission

Why Classical Physics Failed

Classical models worked well for many macroscopic systems, but struggled to explain:

  • photoelectric effect
  • stability of atoms
  • line spectra
  • electron diffraction
  • black-body radiation, historically
  • microscopic probability behaviour

These failures motivated new quantum ideas.

Quantisation Idea

Some physical quantities occur only in discrete packets rather than continuous values.

Examples:

  • light energy carried in photons
  • electrons in atoms occupying discrete energy levels

This is a major departure from classical continuous models.

Photons Overview

Light can behave as particles called photons.

Each photon has energy:

where:

  • = photon energy
  • = Planck constant
  • = frequency

Hence:

  • higher-frequency light has higher-energy photons
  • intensity is not automatically the same as photon energy

Photons may also carry momentum.

Photoelectric Effect Overview

When light shines on certain metal surfaces, electrons may be emitted.

Key observations:

  • emission requires threshold frequency
  • emission can be immediate
  • increasing intensity increases emitted electron number
  • for a fixed metal, maximum electron kinetic energy depends on frequency

This strongly supports the photon model of light.

See Photoelectric Effect.

Wave-Particle Duality Overview

Light shows both:

  • wave behaviour, such as interference and diffraction
  • particle behaviour, such as the photoelectric effect

Matter particles such as electrons also show wave behaviour.

de Broglie proposed:

where is momentum.

This topic is developed fully in Wave-Particle Duality.

Atomic Energy Levels Overview

Electrons in atoms occupy discrete allowed energies.

When electrons move between levels:

  • photons are emitted or absorbed

This explains line spectra.

Detailed treatment:

Atomic Structure

Uncertainty Principle Overview

Certain quantities cannot both be known with unlimited precision.

For position and momentum:

Meaning:

  • more precise position gives less precise momentum
  • quantum systems are fundamentally probabilistic

See Uncertainty Principle.

X-Ray Production Overview

High-speed electrons striking a metal target can produce X-rays.

Two main components of X-ray spectra:

  • continuous background spectrum
  • characteristic sharp lines

Minimum wavelength:

where is the tube accelerating voltage.

See X-Ray Production and Spectra.

How the Main Ideas Connect

Light

  • wave behaviour: diffraction, interference
  • particle behaviour: photons

Electrons

  • particle behaviour: charge, collisions
  • wave behaviour: diffraction

Atoms

  • electrons occupy quantised levels
  • transitions emit or absorb photons

Measurements

  • uncertainty limits simultaneous precision

These ideas together form the basis of quantum physics.

Exam Relevance

Students should be able to:

  • distinguish classical and quantum explanations
  • interpret the photoelectric effect qualitatively and quantitatively
  • connect 23_quantum_physics to the deeper treatment in 24 and 25
  • explain the difference between continuous and characteristic X-rays
  • use the major quantum formulas in the correct context

Formula Summary

Photon Energy

Photoelectric Equation

Stopping Potential

de Broglie Wavelength

Atomic Transition

Minimum X-Ray Wavelength

Uncertainty Principle

Revision Roadmap

If revising this chapter:

  1. understand photons and the photoelectric effect
  2. learn wave-particle duality
  3. learn atomic energy levels and spectra
  4. learn uncertainty principle
  5. learn X-ray production and spectra

Common Exam Traps

Frequent mistakes include:

  • confusing intensity with photon energy
  • forgetting threshold frequency
  • mixing wave evidence with particle evidence
  • confusing continuous and characteristic X-rays
  • using the wrong formula for stopping potential

See Quantum Physics Common Exam Traps.

Summary

Quantum physics explains microscopic phenomena beyond classical models.

Core ideas:

  • energy is quantised
  • light consists of photons
  • matter has wave properties
  • atoms have discrete energy levels
  • uncertainty is fundamental
  • high-energy electron interactions produce X-rays

This topic connects naturally to Wave-Particle Duality and Atomic Structure.

Provenance

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