(Redirected from Reduced Planck\'s constant)
A commemoration plaque for
Max Planck on his discovery of Planck's constant, in front of
Humboldt University,
Berlin. English translation: "Max Planck, discoverer of the elementary quantum of action ''h'', taught in this building from 1889 to 1928."
The 'Planck constant' (denoted '''h''') is a
physical constant that is used to describe the sizes of
quanta. It plays a central role in the theory of
quantum mechanics, and is named after
Max Planck, one of the founders of quantum theory. A closely-related quantity is the 'reduced Planck constant' (also known as 'Dirac's constant' and denoted '''ħ''', pronounced "h-bar"). The Planck constant is also used in measuring energy emitted as
photons, such as in the equation E=''h''
, where E is energy, ''h'' is Planck's constant, and
(
Greek letter nu) is frequency.
The Planck constant and the reduced Planck constant are used to describe quantization, a phenomenon occurring in subatomic
particles such as
electrons and
photons in which certain physical properties occur in fixed amounts rather than assuming a continuous range of possible values.
Units, value and symbols
The Planck constant has dimensions of
energy multiplied by
time, which are also the dimensions of
action. In
SI units, the Planck constant is expressed in
joule-seconds. The dimensions may also be written as
momentum times
distance (
N·
m·
s), which are also the dimensions of
angular momentum. Often the unit of choice is
eV·s, because of the small energies that are often encountered in quantum physics.
The value of the Planck constant is:
:
The two digits between the
parentheses denote the standard uncertainty in the last two digits of the value.
The value of the Dirac constant is:
:
The figures cited here are the 2006
CODATA-recommended values for the constants and their uncertainties. The 2006 CODATA results were made available in March 2007 and represent the best-known, internationally-accepted values for these constants, based on all data available as of 31 December 2006. New CODATA figures are scheduled to be published approximately every four years.
Unicode reserves codepoints U+210E () for the Planck constant, and U+210F () for the Dirac constant.
Origins of Planck's constant
The Planck constant,
, was proposed in reference to the problem of
black-body radiation. The underlying assumption to
Planck's law of black body radiation was that the electromagnetic radiation emitted by a black body could be modeled as a set of
harmonic oscillators with quantized energy of the form:
:
is the quantized energy of the
photons of radiation having
frequency (
Hz) of
(
nu) 'or'
angular frequency (
rad/s) of
(
omega).
This model proved extremely accurate, but it provided an intellectual stumbling block for theoreticians who did not understand where the quantization of energy arose — Planck himself only considered it "a purely formal assumption". This line of questioning helped lead to the formation of
quantum mechanics.
In addition to some assumptions underlying the interpretation of certain values in the quantum mechanical formulation, one of the fundamental corner-stones to the entire theory lies in the
commutator relationship between the position operator
and the momentum operator
:
:
where
is the
Kronecker delta. For more information, see the
mathematical formulation of quantum mechanics.
Usage
The Planck constant is used to describe quantization. For instance, the
energy (''E'') carried by a beam of
light with constant
frequency (''
'') can only take on the values
:
It is sometimes more convenient to use the
angular frequency , which gives
:
Many such "quantization conditions" exist. A particularly interesting condition governs the quantization of
angular momentum. Let ''J'' be the total angular momentum of a system with rotational invariance, and ''J
z'' the angular momentum measured along any given direction. These quantities can only take on the values
:
Thus,
may be said to be the "quantum of angular momentum".
The Planck constant also occurs in statements of
Heisenberg's uncertainty principle. Given a large number of particles prepared in the same state, the
uncertainty in their position,
, and the uncertainty in their momentum (in the same direction),
, obey
:
where the uncertainty is given as the
standard deviation of the measured value from its
expected value.
There are a number of other such pairs of physically measurable values which obey a similar rule.
Dirac constant
The Dirac constant or the "''reduced'' Planck constant",
, differs only from the Planck constant by a factor of
. The Planck constant is stated in
SI units of measurement, joules per
hertz, or joules per (
cycle per second), while the Dirac constant is the same value stated in joules per (
radian per second).
In essence, the Dirac constant is a conversion factor between
phase (in radians) and
action (in joule-seconds) as seen in the
Schrödinger equation. The Planck constant is similarly a conversion factor between phase (in cycles) and action. All other uses of Planck's constant and Dirac's constant follow from that.
Significance of the size of Planck's constant
Expressed in the
SI units of J·s, the Planck constant is one of the smallest constants used in physics. The significance of this is that it reflects the extremely small scales at which quantum mechanical effects are observed, and hence why we are not familiar with quantum physics in our everyday lives in the way that we are with
classical physics. Indeed, classical physics can essentially be defined as the limit of quantum mechanics as the Planck constant tends to zero. In
natural units the Dirac constant is taken as 1 (i.e. the Planck constant is 2·π), as is convenient for describing physics at the atomic scale dominated by quantum effects.
See also
★
Planck units
★
Electromagnetic radiation
★
Natural units
★
Schrödinger equation
★
Wave-particle duality
★
Quantum Hall effect
References
★
NIST link to
CODATA value
★
The Constants of Nature; From Alpha to Omega - The Numbers that Encode the Deepest Secrets of the Universe, , John D., Barrow, Pantheon Books, 2002, ISBN 0-375-42221-8
External links
★
Planck's original 1901 paper
★
Planck's constant and Schrodinger's Cat