Students explore the revolutionary ideas of quantum mechanics that replaced classical physics at the atomic and subatomic scale, discovering how they challenge everyday intuitions about the nature of reality.
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Teach: photon, photoelectric effect, quantisation, wave-particle duality, uncertainty principle, Planck's constant. The photoelectric effect is the entry point — it is the one experiment that definitively shows light must sometimes behave as particles.
Focus on the photoelectric effect and the concept of quantisation before introducing wave-particle duality and uncertainty.
Can students explain the photoelectric effect and why it cannot be explained by classical wave theory? Can they describe wave-particle duality and give one example of each type of behaviour?
No resources needed. This is a conceptual lesson. All calculations require only arithmetic and a value of Planck's constant.
Students often think quantum mechanics replaces classical mechanics entirely. Classical mechanics describes the macroscopic world very well — quantum mechanics is needed at atomic and subatomic scales. Both are valid in their domains.
Quantum mechanics is the most successful physical theory ever developed. It underpins all of modern technology — electronics, lasers, solar cells, MRI — and represents a fundamental revolution in our understanding of nature.
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