Dispersion Relation for Schrodinger’s Wave
The dispersion relation tells us how the wave frequency ω depends on the wavenumber k.
For a free Schrödinger particle, start with the time-dependent Schrödinger equation:iℏ∂t∂ψ=−2mℏ2∂x2∂2ψ
Assume a plane-wave solution:ψ(x,t)=Aei(kx−ωt)
Step 1: Compute the derivatives
Time derivative:∂t∂ψ=−iωψ
Thereforeiℏ∂t∂ψ=ℏωψ
Spatial second derivative:∂x2∂2ψ=−k2ψ
Therefore−2mℏ2∂x2∂2ψ=2mℏ2k2ψ
Substituting into Schrödinger’s equation givesℏωψ=2mℏ2k2ψ
Cancelling ψ,ω=2mℏk2
This is the Schrödinger dispersion relation.
Visualizing the dispersion relation
The relation is quadratic in k:ω∝k2
ω=2mℏk2
Unlike light waves, whereω=ck
the Schrödinger particle’s frequency grows as the square of the wavenumber.
Connection to momentum and energy
Using de Broglie’s relations:p=ℏk E=ℏω
Substituting into the dispersion relation:E=ℏ(2mℏk2)=2mℏ2k2
Since p=ℏk,E=2mp2
which is exactly the classical nonrelativistic kinetic energy.
Thus the Schrödinger dispersion relation is simply the wave version of Newtonian mechanics.
Phase velocity
The phase velocity isvp=kω
Substituting the dispersion relation:vp=2mℏk=2mp
Sincev=mp
we obtainvp=2v
The phase of the wave moves at half the particle velocity.
Group velocity
A particle is represented by a wave packet, not a single plane wave.
The packet moves at the group velocity:vg=dkdω
Differentiating,vg=mℏk
Using p=ℏk,vg=mp
Thereforevg=v
The group velocity equals the particle’s classical velocity.
Why wave packets spread
Becauseω∝k2
different Fourier components travel at different group velocities:vg=mℏk
Large-k components move faster than small-k components.
As time passes, the packet spreads out.
This is called dispersion.
For light in vacuum,ω=ck
anddkdω=c
for every k, so no spreading occurs.
For Schrödinger waves,dk2d2ω=mℏ=0
and the packet inevitably disperses.
Why Lorentz invariance fails
The Schrödinger equation assumesE=2mp2
which leads directly toω=2mℏk2.
A Lorentz transformation mixes energy and momentum:E′=γ(E−vp) p′=γ(p−c2vE)
and the transformed quantities no longer satisfyE′=2mp′2.
Thus the Schrödinger dispersion relation is preserved only under Galilean transformations, not Lorentz transformations.
That is why relativistic quantum theory replaces the Schrödinger relationE=2mp2
withE2=p2c2+m2c4,
leading to the relativistic wave equations such as the Klein-Gordon and Dirac equations.
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