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El Hombre Invisible
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Apologies to those I've already driven mad with questions on HUP and particle-antiparticle annihilation, but here's three more.
I was reading Feynman's Lectures wherein he explains why electrons do not combine with protons in hydrogen atoms. This was the same answer I got to my question of why quarks of opposite charges in nuclei have separation despite having both electromagnetic and strong attractions in an earlier thread. HUP states that as the electron nears the proton, its position becomes more certain, so the uncertainty of its momentum greatly increases, therefore its kinetic energy is great enough to escape the proton's pull.
Q1. Why does greater uncertainty in momentum necessarily lead to greater kinetic energy? Surely if the momentum is uncertain, the kinetic energy mall fall into a range of values, some of which may be small (we do not know if it is great or small)?
Q2. Furthermore, why does the certainty in position increase as the electron nears the proton? If there is uncertainty in the position of the proton itself, then surely the electron's proximity to it sheds no more light on the electron's position? If protons and electrons could combine (as in neutron stars?), they could do so with high uncertainty as to exactly where they do so. (This, then, is a question of why the HUP forbids the event to happen at all rather than why we cannot observe it happening.)
Q3. Why does this not forbid positrons from annihilating with electrons? As the positron approaches the electron, surely the same increase in certainty as to the position of the positron is gained as the electron as it nears the proton. Therefore the same increase in UNcertainty of its momentum will ensure high enough kinetic energies to avoid annihilation?
Simply being reassured that this is fully explained will be partially satisfactory as I will (hopefully) hit this later on in my studies. If the answer can be explained to me now, conceptually, that is a huge bonus. I am probably not at a high enough mathematical level to understand the mechanics of the explanation, or even the question, but maybe there's a way to explain it at a high conceptual level. Also please correct any misintepretation of Feynman's lecture I have made - I tend to read him in short bursts late at night when I'm not at my best.
Thanks...
El Hombre
I was reading Feynman's Lectures wherein he explains why electrons do not combine with protons in hydrogen atoms. This was the same answer I got to my question of why quarks of opposite charges in nuclei have separation despite having both electromagnetic and strong attractions in an earlier thread. HUP states that as the electron nears the proton, its position becomes more certain, so the uncertainty of its momentum greatly increases, therefore its kinetic energy is great enough to escape the proton's pull.
Q1. Why does greater uncertainty in momentum necessarily lead to greater kinetic energy? Surely if the momentum is uncertain, the kinetic energy mall fall into a range of values, some of which may be small (we do not know if it is great or small)?
Q2. Furthermore, why does the certainty in position increase as the electron nears the proton? If there is uncertainty in the position of the proton itself, then surely the electron's proximity to it sheds no more light on the electron's position? If protons and electrons could combine (as in neutron stars?), they could do so with high uncertainty as to exactly where they do so. (This, then, is a question of why the HUP forbids the event to happen at all rather than why we cannot observe it happening.)
Q3. Why does this not forbid positrons from annihilating with electrons? As the positron approaches the electron, surely the same increase in certainty as to the position of the positron is gained as the electron as it nears the proton. Therefore the same increase in UNcertainty of its momentum will ensure high enough kinetic energies to avoid annihilation?
Simply being reassured that this is fully explained will be partially satisfactory as I will (hopefully) hit this later on in my studies. If the answer can be explained to me now, conceptually, that is a huge bonus. I am probably not at a high enough mathematical level to understand the mechanics of the explanation, or even the question, but maybe there's a way to explain it at a high conceptual level. Also please correct any misintepretation of Feynman's lecture I have made - I tend to read him in short bursts late at night when I'm not at my best.
Thanks...
El Hombre