Inside the barrier,
κ=√
2 m(V 0 −E)
̄h^2.
x
incident wave
reflected
E
V 0
V(x)transmitted
x0
0e + Re
ikx -ikx Teikx
Ae +BeEnergy
κ −κxThis is actually the same as the (unbound) potential well problem withthe substitution
k′→iκin the center region.
Theamplitude to be transmittedis
T=e−^2 ika2 kκ
2 kκcosh(2κa)−i(k^2 −κ^2 ) sinh(2κa).
We can compute the probability to be transmitted.
|T|^2 =
(2kκ)^2
(k^2 +κ^2 )^2 sinh^2 (2κa) + (2kκ)^2→
(
4 kκ
k^2 +κ^2) 2
e−^4 κaAnapproximate probabilityis sometimes useful.
|T|^2 ≈e−^2 κ(2a)=e− 2∫a
−a√ 2 m
̄h^2 [V(x)−E]
dxClassically the transmission probability would be zero. In Quantum Mechanics, the particle
isallowed to violate energy conservation for a short timeand so has a chance to tunnel
through the barrier.
Tunneling can be applied to cold emission of electrons from a metal, alpha decay of nuclei, semicon-
ductors, and many other problems.