(quantum mechanics) A convenient unit of length that is characteristic of an elementary particle, equal to Planck's constant divided by the product of the particle's mass and the speed of light.
| Sci-Tech Dictionary: Compton wavelength |
(quantum mechanics) A convenient unit of length that is characteristic of an elementary particle, equal to Planck's constant divided by the product of the particle's mass and the speed of light.
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| Measures and Units: Compton wavelength |
[Etymology: A. H. Compton; USA 1892-1962] fundamental constant. Symbol λc. A critical distance below which certain quantum-mechanical effects take place for any particle. For the electron as a reference constant, = h/mec = 2.426 310 238(16) × 10-12 m with relative standard uncertainty 6.7 × 10-9.
[Mohr P. J., Taylor B. N. CODATA Recommended Values of the Fundamental Physical Constants: 2002 (to be published)]
[Mohr P. J., Taylor B. N. Rev. Mod. Phys. Vol. 72:351-495 (2000)]
[Mohr P. Phys. Today Vol. 53:7, 11-16 (2000)]
[For latest recommended values, see
The crossed symbol denotes the Compton wavelength over 2 pi (i.e. 2π) = 386.159 267 8(26) × 10-15 m, which is the natural unit of length.
| Wikipedia: Compton wavelength |
The Compton wavelength is a quantum mechanical property of a particle. It was introduced by Arthur Compton in his explanation of the scattering of photons by electrons (a process known as Compton scattering). The Compton wavelength of a particle is equivalent to the wavelength of a photon whose energy is the same as the rest-mass energy of the particle.
The Compton wavelength, λ, of a particle is given by

where h is the Planck constant, m is the particle's rest mass, and c is the speed of light. The significance of this formula is shown in the derivation of the Compton shift formula.
The CODATA 2006 value for the Compton wavelength of the electron is 2.4263102175±33×10−12 meters.[1] Other particles have different Compton wavelengths.
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When the Compton wavelength is divided by two pi, one obtains a smaller or “reduced” Compton wavelength:

The reduced Compton wavelength is a natural representation for mass on the quantum scale, and as such, it appears in many of the fundamental equations of quantum mechanics. The reduced Compton wavelength appears in the relativistic Klein-Gordon equation for a free particle:

It appears in the Dirac equation (the following is an explicitly covariant form employing the Einstein summation convention):

The reduced Compton wavelength also appears in Schrödinger's equation, although its presence is obscured in traditional representations of the equation. The following is the traditional representation of Schrödinger’s equation for an electron in a hydrogen-like atom:

Dividing through by
, and rewriting in terms of the fine structure constant, one obtains:

The reduced Compton wavelength is a natural representation for mass on the quantum scale. Equations that pertain to mass in the form of mass, like Klein-Gordon and Schrödinger's, use the reduced Compton wavelength. The non-reduced Compton wavelength is a natural representation for mass that has been converted into energy. Equations that pertain to the conversion of mass into energy, or to the wavelengths of photons interacting with mass, use the non-reduced Compton wavelength.
A particle of rest mass m has a rest energy of E = mc2. The non-reduced Compton wavelength for this particle is the wavelength of a photon of the same energy. For photons of frequency f, energy is given by

which yields the non-reduced Compton wavelength formula if solved for λ.
The reduced Compton wavelength can be thought of as a fundamental limitation on measuring the position of a particle, taking quantum mechanics and special relativity into account. This depends on the mass m of the particle. To see this, note that we can measure the position of a particle by bouncing light off it - but measuring the position accurately requires light of short wavelength. Light with a short wavelength consists of photons of high energy. If the energy of these photons exceeds mc2, when one hits the particle whose position is being measured the collision may have enough energy to create a new particle of the same type. This renders moot the question of the original particle's location.
This argument also shows that the reduced Compton wavelength is the cutoff below which quantum field theory – which can describe particle creation and annihilation – becomes important.
We can make the above argument a bit more precise as follows. Suppose we wish to measure the position of a particle to within an accuracy Δx. Then the uncertainty relation for position and momentum says that

so the uncertainty in the particle's momentum satisfies

Using the relativistic relation between momentum and energy p = γm0v, when Δp exceeds mc then the uncertainty in energy is greater than mc2, which is enough energy to create another particle of the same type. It follows that there is a fundamental limitation on Δx:

Thus the uncertainty in position must be greater than half of the reduced Compton wavelength ħ/mc.
The Compton wavelength can be contrasted with the de Broglie wavelength, which depends on the momentum of a particle and determines the cutoff between particle and wave behavior in quantum mechanics.
The reduced Compton wavelength of the electron is one of a trio of related units of length, the other two being the Bohr radius a0 and the classical electron radius re. Any one of these three lengths can be written in terms of any other using the fine structure constant α:

The non-reduced Compton wavelength of the electron is related to the Rydberg constant as follows:

The Compton Wavelength has been interpreted as the radius of a rotating system with velocity c and angular momentum h.[citation needed]
The Planck mass is special because the reduced Compton wavelength for this mass is equal to half of the Schwarzschild radius. This special distance is called the Planck length. This is a simple case of dimensional analysis: the Schwarzschild radius is proportional to the mass, whereas the Compton wavelength is proportional to the inverse of the mass.
For fermions, the non-reduced Compton wavelength sets the cross-section of interactions. For example, the cross-section for Thomson scattering of a photon from an electron is equal to
,
where
is the fine-structure constant and
is the Compton wavelength of the electron. For gauge bosons, the Compton wavelength sets the effective range of the Yukawa interaction: since the photon has no rest mass, electromagnetism has infinite range.
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