Dispersion Relation

In the physical sciences and electrical engineering, dispersion relations describe the effect of dispersion on the properties of waves in a medium.

A dispersion relation relates the wavelength or wavenumber of a wave to its frequency. Given the dispersion relation, one can calculate the frequency-dependent phase velocity and group velocity of each sinusoidal component of a wave in the medium, as a function of frequency. In addition to the geometry-dependent and material-dependent dispersion relations, the overarching Kramers–Kronig relations describe the frequency-dependence of wave propagation and attenuation.

Dispersion Relation
In a prism, dispersion causes different colors to refract at different angles, splitting white light into a rainbow of colors.

Dispersion may be caused either by geometric boundary conditions (waveguides, shallow water) or by interaction of the waves with the transmitting medium. Elementary particles, considered as matter waves, have a nontrivial dispersion relation, even in the absence of geometric constraints and other media.

In the presence of dispersion, a wave does not propagate with an unchanging waveform, giving rise to the distinct frequency-dependent phase velocity and group velocity.

Dispersion

Dispersion occurs when sinusoidal waves of different wavelengths have different propagation velocities, so that a wave packet of mixed wavelengths tends to spread out in space. The speed of a plane wave, Dispersion Relation , is a function of the wave's wavelength Dispersion Relation :

    Dispersion Relation 

The wave's speed, wavelength, and frequency, f, are related by the identity

    Dispersion Relation 

The function Dispersion Relation  expresses the dispersion relation of the given medium. Dispersion relations are more commonly expressed in terms of the angular frequency Dispersion Relation  and wavenumber Dispersion Relation . Rewriting the relation above in these variables gives

    Dispersion Relation 

where we now view f as a function of k. The use of ω(k) to describe the dispersion relation has become standard because both the phase velocity ω/k and the group velocity /dk have convenient representations via this function.

The plane waves being considered can be described by

    Dispersion Relation 

where

  • A is the amplitude of the wave,
  • A0 = A(0, 0),
  • x is a position along the wave's direction of travel, and
  • t is the time at which the wave is described.

Plane waves in vacuum

Plane waves in vacuum are the simplest case of wave propagation: no geometric constraint, no interaction with a transmitting medium.

Electromagnetic waves in vacuum

For electromagnetic waves in vacuum, the angular frequency is proportional to the wavenumber:

    Dispersion Relation 

This is a linear dispersion relation. In this case, the phase velocity and the group velocity are the same:

    Dispersion Relation 

and thus both are equal to the speed of light in vacuum, which is frequency-independent.

De Broglie dispersion relations

For de Broglie matter waves the frequency dispersion relation is non-linear:

Dispersion Relation 
The equation says the matter wave frequency Dispersion Relation  in vacuum varies with wavenumber (Dispersion Relation ) in the non-relativistic approximation. The variation has two parts: a constant part due to the de Broglie frequency of the rest mass (Dispersion Relation ) and a quadratic part due to kinetic energy.

Derivation

While applications of matter waves occur at non-relativistic velocity, de Broglie applied special relativity to derive his waves. Starting from the relativistic energy–momentum relation:

Dispersion Relation 
use the de Broglie relations for energy and momentum for matter waves,
    Dispersion Relation 

where ω is the angular frequency and k is the wavevector with magnitude |k| = k, equal to the wave number. Divide by Dispersion Relation  and take the square root. This gives the relativistic frequency dispersion relation:

Dispersion Relation 

Practical work with matter waves occurs at non-relativistic velocity. To approximate, we pull out the rest-mass dependent frequency:

Dispersion Relation 

Then we see that the Dispersion Relation  factor is very small so for Dispersion Relation  not too large, we expand Dispersion Relation  and multiply:

Dispersion Relation 
This gives the non-relativistic approximation discussed above. If we start with the non-relativistic Schrödinger equation we will end up without the first, rest mass, term.

Frequency versus wavenumber

As mentioned above, when the focus in a medium is on refraction rather than absorption—that is, on the real part of the refractive index—it is common to refer to the functional dependence of angular frequency on wavenumber as the dispersion relation. For particles, this translates to a knowledge of energy as a function of momentum.

Waves and optics

The name "dispersion relation" originally comes from optics. It is possible to make the effective speed of light dependent on wavelength by making light pass through a material which has a non-constant index of refraction, or by using light in a non-uniform medium such as a waveguide. In this case, the waveform will spread over time, such that a narrow pulse will become an extended pulse, i.e., be dispersed. In these materials, Dispersion Relation  is known as the group velocity and corresponds to the speed at which the peak of the pulse propagates, a value different from the phase velocity.

Deep water waves

Dispersion Relation 
Frequency dispersion of surface gravity waves on deep water. The red square moves with the phase velocity, and the green dots propagate with the group velocity. In this deep-water case, the phase velocity is twice the group velocity. The red square traverses the figure in the time it takes the green dot to traverse half.

The dispersion relation for deep water waves is often written as

    Dispersion Relation 

where g is the acceleration due to gravity. Deep water, in this respect, is commonly denoted as the case where the water depth is larger than half the wavelength. In this case the phase velocity is

    Dispersion Relation 

and the group velocity is

    Dispersion Relation 

Waves on a string

Dispersion Relation 
Two-frequency beats of a non-dispersive transverse wave. Since the wave is non-dispersive, phase and group velocities are equal.

For an ideal string, the dispersion relation can be written as

    Dispersion Relation 

where T is the tension force in the string, and μ is the string's mass per unit length. As for the case of electromagnetic waves in vacuum, ideal strings are thus a non-dispersive medium, i.e. the phase and group velocities are equal and independent (to first order) of vibration frequency.

For a nonideal string, where stiffness is taken into account, the dispersion relation is written as

    Dispersion Relation 

where Dispersion Relation  is a constant that depends on the string.

Electron band structure

In the study of solids, the study of the dispersion relation of electrons is of paramount importance. The periodicity of crystals means that many levels of energy are possible for a given momentum and that some energies might not be available at any momentum. The collection of all possible energies and momenta is known as the band structure of a material. Properties of the band structure define whether the material is an insulator, semiconductor or conductor.

Phonons

Phonons are to sound waves in a solid what photons are to light: they are the quanta that carry it. The dispersion relation of phonons is also non-trivial and important, being directly related to the acoustic and thermal properties of a material. For most systems, the phonons can be categorized into two main types: those whose bands become zero at the center of the Brillouin zone are called acoustic phonons, since they correspond to classical sound in the limit of long wavelengths. The others are optical phonons, since they can be excited by electromagnetic radiation.

Electron optics

With high-energy (e.g., 200 keV, 32 fJ) electrons in a transmission electron microscope, the energy dependence of higher-order Laue zone (HOLZ) lines in convergent beam electron diffraction (CBED) patterns allows one, in effect, to directly image cross-sections of a crystal's three-dimensional dispersion surface. This dynamical effect has found application in the precise measurement of lattice parameters, beam energy, and more recently for the electronics industry: lattice strain.

History

Isaac Newton studied refraction in prisms but failed to recognize the material dependence of the dispersion relation, dismissing the work of another researcher whose measurement of a prism's dispersion did not match Newton's own.

Dispersion of waves on water was studied by Pierre-Simon Laplace in 1776.

The universality of the Kramers–Kronig relations (1926–27) became apparent with subsequent papers on the dispersion relation's connection to causality in the scattering theory of all types of waves and particles.

See also

References

Tags:

Dispersion Relation DispersionDispersion Relation Plane waves in vacuumDispersion Relation Frequency versus wavenumberDispersion Relation HistoryDispersion RelationAttenuationElectrical engineeringFrequencyGroup velocityKramers–Kronig relationsPhase velocityPhysical scienceWave propagationWavelengthWavenumber

🔥 Trending searches on Wiki English:

Kirstie AlleyShou Zi ChewLate Night with the DevilCzech RepublicDamaged (film)C. S. LewisStephen CurryIsraeli–Palestinian conflictDownloadInter MilanMin Hee-jinSummer LeeCarnation RevolutionBitcoinRoad House (1989 film)Jeffrey DonaldsonCloud seedingPremier LeagueThe Rookie (TV series)JesusLiverpool F.C.Mike Conley Jr.NATOMalaysia69 (sex position)Apple Inc.Ku Klux KlanAavesham (2024 film)3 Body Problem (TV series)SapovirusOda NobunagaWar for the Planet of the ApesWish (film)Andrew SantinoNorovirus2024 Mutua Madrid Open – Women's singlesLok SabhaStripchatInna Lillahi wa inna ilayhi raji'unJon Bon JoviIranGreenland sharkHTTP 404ShogunVasuki indicusAdolf HitlerU.S. stateKurt CobainList of constituencies of the Lok SabhaSigmund FreudTimur IvanovYandexJohn F. KennedyAFC Champions LeagueDavid BowiePolandMichael Douglas2024 NBA playoffsElizabeth IIAmanda SealesOrlando BloomList of English football championsWalton GogginsLiz TrussVenus WilliamsMauricio PochettinoLimoneneBohemian GroveGene SimmonsMarilyn MonroeEiza GonzálezArmenian genocideEnglish languageMarcus StoinisTurks and Caicos IslandsI, Robot (film)Ottoman Empire🡆 More