27–29 Sept 2021
Online
Europe/Warsaw timezone
Abstract submission and Registration are closed.

Diffraction and interference with run-and-tumble particles

28 Sept 2021, 13:35
5m
Online

Online

Flash talk S5

Speaker

Kasper Meerts (KU Leuven)

Description

Run-and-tumble particles, frequently considered today for modeling bacterial locomotion, naturally appear outside a biological context as well, e.g. for producing waves in the telegraph process. Here, we use a wave function to drive their propulsion and tumbling. Such quantum-active motion realizes a jittery motion of Dirac electrons (as in the famous Zitterbewegung): the Dirac electron is a run-and-tumble particle, where the tumbling is between chiralities. We visualize the trajectories in diffraction and double slit experiments for electrons. In particular, that yields the time-of-arrival statistics of the electrons at the screen. Finally, we observe that away from pure quantum guidance, run-and-tumble particles with suitable spacetime-dependent parameters produce an interference pattern as well.

Primary author

Kasper Meerts (KU Leuven)

Presentation materials

There are no materials yet.