- Electron bubble
An electron bubble is the empty space created around a free
electron in a cryogenic gas or liquid, such asneon orhelium . They are typically very small, about 2 nm in diameter at atmospheric pressure.Electron bubbles in helium
At room temperature, electrons in
noble gas ses move about freely, limited only by collisions with the weakly interacting atoms. Theirmobility , which depends on the gas density and temperature, is well described by classicalkinetic theory . As the temperature is lowered the electron mobility increases, since the helium atoms slow down at lower temperature and do not interact with the electron as often [#Footnotes| [1] .Below a critical temperature, the mobility of the electrons drops quickly to a value much below what is expected classically. This discrepancy led to the development of the electron bubble theory [#Footnotes| [2] . At low temperatures, electrons injected into
liquid helium do not move freely as one might expect, but rather form small vacuum bubbles around themselves.Electron repulsion from the surface of helium
Electrons are attracted to liquid helium due to the difference in
dielectric constant s between the gas and liquid phase of helium. The negative electronpolarize s the helium at the surface, leading to animage charge which binds it to the surface. The electron is forbidden from entering the liquid for the same reasonhydrogen atoms are stable:quantum mechanics . The electron and image charge form abound state , just as an electron andproton do in a hydrogen atom, with a minimum average separation. In this case, the minimum energy is about 1eV (a moderate amount of energy on an atomic scale) [#Footnotes| [3] . When an electron is forced into liquid helium rather than floating on its surface, it forms a bubble rather than enter the liquid. The size of this bubble is determined by three main factors (ignoring small corrections): the confinement term, thesurface tension term, and the pressure-volume term. The confinement term is purely quantum mechanical, since whenever an electron is tightly confined, itskinetic energy goes up. The surface tension term represents thesurface energy of the liquid helium; this is exactly like water and all other liquids. The pressure-volume term is the amount of energy needed to push the helium out of the bubble [#Footnotes| [4] .Here E is the energy of the bubble, h is
Planck's constant , m is theelectron mass , R is the bubble radius, α is the surface energy, and P is the ambient pressure.plitting the electron bubble
When an electron becomes excited, its movement through space, represented by a "probability cloud", in the 1P state becomes "dumb-bell" shaped and therefore so too does its electron bubble. British physicist Humphrey Maris had the idea "if the dumb-bell could be stretched and pinched, might it simply divide?" Maris calculated that light with a wavelength of around 10
micrometres would excite the electron into its "dumb-bell" shaped bubble which, under great pressure, would split at its thinnest point giving two "half bubbles" with half an electron in each.However, in modern
quantum mechanics there is no such thing as a "half-electron," leading to much scepticism from experts in quantum theory although none of them have been able to disprove Maris's theory. It seems either Maris or quantum theory must be wrong as the theories are mutually incompatible.The 2S electron bubble
A theoretical prediction has been made based on the analysis of the equation above [#Footnotes| [5] , that the 2S electron bubble exhibits a startling morphological instability under a wide range of ambient pressures. While its
wave function is spherical, the stable shape of the bubble is nonspherical.Footnotes
*1. G. Ramanan and Gordon R. Freeman "Electron Mobilities in Low Density Helium and Nitrogen Gases" Journal of Chemical Physics 93, 3120 (1990)
*2. C. G. Kuper "Theory of Negative Ions in Liquid Helium" Physical Review 122, 1007 (1961)
*3. W. T. Sommer "Liquid Helium as a Barrier to Electrons" Physical Review Letters 12, 271-273 (1964)
*4. M. A. Woolf and G. W. Rayfield "Energy of Negative Ions in Liquid Helium by Photoelectric Emission" Physical Review Letters 15, 235 (1965)
*5. P. Grinfeld and H. Kojima "Instability of the 2S Electron Bubbles " Physical Review Letters 91, 105301 (2003)
=External links=* [http://www.hpcwire.com/hpc-bin/artread.pl?direction=Current&articlenumber=18711 Maris' theorey of split electron bubbles]
* [http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2005-11/ns-qba112305.php Eurekalert]
* [http://www.newscientist.com New Scientist ]
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