2.3 KiB
Plane Waves, Phase Twist, and the Corkscrew Picture
Key Realisation
A quantum plane wave is not just an oscillating wave.
It is a wave whose phase is continuously twisting through space.
This spatial twist corresponds to motion and momentum.
Start with the plane wave
\psi(x,t) = e^{i(kx-\omega t)}
Using Euler's identity:
e^{i\theta} = \cos\theta + i\sin\theta
So
\psi(x,t) = \cos(kx-\omega t) + i\sin(kx-\omega t)
The cosine part looks like an ordinary travelling wave.
But the deeper structure is in the phase.
The phase
The phase is
\theta(x,t) = kx - \omega t
As we move through space:
\frac{\partial \theta}{\partial x} = k
So the phase rotates steadily as position changes.
At every point in space the wavefunction behaves like a tiny rotating vector (phasor).
Corkscrew picture
If we plot:
- x = position
- y = cos(kx)
- z = sin(kx)
the curve becomes a helix.
So the plane wave can be visualised as a corkscrew twisting through space.
The wave isn't just going up and down — its phase is spiralling as it moves.
Momentum comes from the twist
De Broglie discovered:
p = \hbar k
But
k = \frac{\partial \theta}{\partial x}
So momentum can be written as
p = \hbar \nabla \theta
Meaning:
Momentum is the spatial rate of phase twist.
The faster the corkscrew twists through space, the larger the momentum.
Kinetic energy and curvature
Classically:
T = \frac{p^2}{2m}
Substituting p = \hbar k:
T = \frac{\hbar^2 k^2}{2m}
But the second derivative of the wave gives:
\frac{\partial^2}{\partial x^2} e^{ikx} = -k^2 e^{ikx}
So kinetic energy acting on the wave becomes
T = -\frac{\hbar^2}{2m} \nabla^2
This is why the Laplacian appears in the Schrödinger equation.
Final intuition
The wavefunction contains two things:
Amplitude
- how much probability is present
Phase
- how the probability flow moves through space
The phase twists through space like a corkscrew, and that twist is directly related to momentum and motion.
One‑line summary
A quantum plane wave is a corkscrew of phase twisting through space, and the rate of twist determines the particle's momentum.