
Final Review 1
Apr 27, 2006
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Have you ever wondered how electrons can sneak through a metal and conduct electricity with all those atoms in the way? It's Bloch's theorem. The electrons organize themselves into the right quantum mechanical states tha...
Lecture 09: Bloch's Theorem is an episode from Solid State Physics by Prof. Carlson. Have you ever wondered how electrons can sneak through a metal and conduct electricity with all those atoms in the way? It's Bloch's theorem. The electrons...
This episode belongs to Solid State Physics.
Audio availability depends on the podcast feed.
Published Feb 15, 2006.
Have you ever wondered how electrons can sneak through a metal and conduct electricity with all those atoms in the way? It's Bloch's theorem. The electrons organize themselves into the right quantum mechanical states that automatically take into account the periodicity of the crystal. Electrons in a metal are shared by each atom in a type of molecular bond that extends over the whole crystal. These are the states which carry current. This lecture is heavy on the quantum mechanics -- you'll hear about eigenstates and eigenvalues, and how in a crystal, the eigenstates of energy can be simultaneously diagonalized with the eigenstates of translation in the crystal. These give the states mentioned above, where the electrons are delocalized throughout the whole crystal. Lecture Audio
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Lecture 09: Bloch's Theorem is an episode from Solid State Physics by Prof. Carlson.
The episode duration depends on the source podcast feed and may not always be available.
This episode was published on Feb 15, 2006.
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