However, real mechanical systems (e.g., deep-water waves) do exhibit dispersion (( \omega \propto \sqrtk )), making them analogous to quantum systems in spreading behavior. Similarly, EM pulses in dispersive media spread. Thus, the key distinction is not mechanical vs. quantum but .
Starting from Gaussian wave packet at ( t=0 ): [ \psi(x,0) = \left( \frac12\pi\sigma_0^2 \right)^1/4 e^-x^2/(4\sigma_0^2) e^ik_0x ] Fourier transform gives ( A(k) \propto e^-\sigma_0^2 (k-k_0)^2 ). Using ( \omega = \hbar k^2/(2m) ), integrate to get [ |\psi(x,t)|^2 = \frac1\sqrt2\pi , \sigma(t) e^-(x - v_g t)^2/(2\sigma(t)^2), \quad \sigma(t) = \sigma_0 \sqrt1 + \left( \frac\hbar t2m\sigma_0^2 \right)^2 ] Hence width grows unbounded as ( t \to \infty ). ∎ waves bundle comparison
[ \omega(k) = \frac\hbar k^22m \quad \text(quadratic, dispersive) ] However, real mechanical systems (e
If ( \omega(k) ) is linear in ( k ), the bundle propagates without distortion. If nonlinear, the envelope spreads over time. Governing equation: 1D wave equation [ \frac\partial^2 y\partial t^2 = v^2 \frac\partial^2 y\partial x^2, \quad v = \sqrtT/\mu ] where ( T ) = tension, ( \mu ) = linear density. quantum but
[ \omega = c|k| \quad \text(linear, nondispersive) ]
[ \psi(x,t) = \frac1\sqrt2\pi \int_-\infty^\infty A(k) , e^i(kx - \omega(k)t) , dk ]