Free particle
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In physics, a free particle is a particle that, in some sense, is not bound. In classical physics, this means the particle is not subject to any external force.
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[edit] Classical Free Particle
The classical free particle is characterized simply by a fixed velocity. The momentum is given by
and the energy by
where m is the mass of the particle and v is the vector velocity of the particle.
[edit] Non-Relativistic Quantum Free Particle
The Schrödinger equation for a free particle is:
The solution for a particular momentum is given by a plane wave:
with the constraint
where r is the position vector, t is time, k is the wave vector, and ω is the angular frequency. Since the integral of ψψ* over all space must be unity, the wave function must first be normalized. This is not a problem for general free particles somewhat localized in momentum and position. (See particle in a box for a further discussion.)
The expectation value of the momentum p is
The expectation value of the energy E is
Solving for k and ω and substituting into the constraint equation yields the familiar relationship between energy and momentum for non-relativistic massive particles
where p=|p|. The group velocity of the wave is defined as
where v is the classical velocity of the particle. The phase velocity of the wave is defined as
A general free particle need not have a specific momentum or energy. In this case, the free particle wavefunction may be represented by a superposition of free particle momentum eigenfunctions:
where the integral is over all k-space.
[edit] Relativistic free particle
There are a number of equations describing relativistic particles. For a description of the free particle solutions, see the individual articles.
- The Klein-Gordon equation describes charge-neutral, spinless, relativistic quantum particles
- The Dirac equation describes the relativistic electron (charged, spin 1/2)