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Approximation Methods in Quantum Mechanics

Perturbation theory is used to approximate solutions to the Schrödinger equation. The document discusses applying perturbation theory to calculate small energy shifts in the hydrogen atom due to spin-orbit interaction and relativistic effects. The spin-orbit interaction lifts the degeneracy of energy levels with l ≠ 0. The relativistic perturbation and Darwin terms shift all energy levels. The perturbations are treated as small corrections to the hydrogen atom's exact solutions and calculated using first-order perturbation theory.

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100% found this document useful (1 vote)
781 views10 pages

Approximation Methods in Quantum Mechanics

Perturbation theory is used to approximate solutions to the Schrödinger equation. The document discusses applying perturbation theory to calculate small energy shifts in the hydrogen atom due to spin-orbit interaction and relativistic effects. The spin-orbit interaction lifts the degeneracy of energy levels with l ≠ 0. The relativistic perturbation and Darwin terms shift all energy levels. The perturbations are treated as small corrections to the hydrogen atom's exact solutions and calculated using first-order perturbation theory.

Uploaded by

John
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Unit 14

Approximation methods
in quantum mechanics

Perturbation theory:

TISE: ˆ ψ n = Enψ n
H

ˆ (0)ψ n(0) = En(0)ψ n(0)


H
(closely related; simplified; exact solution)
perturbation: δ H ˆ =H ˆ −H ˆ (0)

ψ n(0) ⇔ ψ n

perturbation can
shift unperturbed
levels, split
degenerate levels

SM355 – 2005 1 22 September/Tut7


iterative process: approximation can be fed back in to get
better approximation

δH
ˆ =H
ˆ −H
ˆ (0) = kH
ˆ (1) leads to perturbation expansions:

En = En(0) + kEn(1) + k 2 En(2) + …


ψ n = ψ n(0) + kψ n(1) + k 2ψ n(2) + …

equating terms of same order give a series of


relationships, the most important being the first-order
relationship:

kEn(1) = (ψ n(0) , δ H
ˆ ψ n(0) )

i.e., the first-order energy correction is equal to the


expectation value of the perturbation evaluated in the
zero-order eigenstate
SM355 – 2005 2 22 September/Tut7
different sets of degenerate zero-order eigenvectors may
give different corrections (shifts or splittings)
2
(δ H ) pn ψ (0)
(δ H ) pn
kψ =∑ =∑
(1) p 2 (2)
k E
−E −
n (0) (0) n (0) (0)
p≠n En p E
p≠n n E p

diagonal matrix elements = first-order energy corrections:

kEn(1) = (ψ n(0) , δ H
ˆ ψ (0) ) = (δ H )
n nn

terms of perturbation expansion decrease rapidly if small


perturbation: (δ H ) pn En(0) − E p(0) p≠n

problems when the perturbation removes the degeneracy of


a set of degenerate zero-order states: combine states

variational method:

estimate energy eigenvalues, especially ground state


energy

use trial wavefunction ψ t ( x)

E =
( ˆψ )
ψ ,H
t t

(ψ t ,ψ t )
uses adjustable parameters: minimize E

SM355 – 2005 3 22 September/Tut7


Unit 15
Identical particles and atomic structure

Symmetric function: f ( x2 , x1 ) = f ( x1 , x2 )

Antisymmetric function: f ( x2 , x1 ) = − f ( x1 , x2 )

Pˆ12 Ψ ( r1 , r2 , t ) = Ψ ( r2 , r1 , t ) exchange operator

Schrödinger’s equation for 1-D system of two non-


interacting particles:

⎛ 2
∂2 2
∂2 ⎞ ∂Ψ
− −
⎜ 2m ∂x 2 2m ∂x 2 1 1+ V ( x ) + V ( x2 ⎟
) Ψ ( x , x , t ) = i ( x1 , x2 , t )

2 1 2
⎝ 1 1 2 2 ⎠ t

Probability: Ψ * ( x1 , x2 , t ) Ψ ( x1 , x2 , t ) ∆x1∆x2

Solutions: Ψ ( x1 , x2 , t ) = Ψ A ( x1 ) Ψ B ( x2 )e −i ( EA + EB ) t /
with
2
d 2ψ A
− 2
+ V1 ( x1 )ψ A = E Aψ A
2m1 dx1
d 2ψ B
2
− 2
+ V2 ( x2 )ψ B = E Aψ B
2m2 dx2
E = E A + EB
SM355 – 2005 4 22 September/Tut7
Identical particles: cannot be distinguished by means of
any inherent property such as mass, charge, or spin

Wave function for a system of identical particles must be


either symmetric or antisymmetric under the interchange
of the coordinates of any pair of particles:
1
ψ s ( x1 , x2 ) = [ψ A ( x1 )ψ b ( x2 ) + ψ A ( x2 )ψ B ( x1 )]
2
1
ψ a ( x1 , x2 ) = [ψ A ( x1 )ψ b ( x2 ) −ψ A ( x2 )ψ B ( x1 )]
2
E = E A + EB

half-integer spin: fermions antisymmetric total Ψ


integer spin: bosons symmetric total Ψ

ψ s (r1 , r2 ) = ψ A (r1 )ψ A ( r2 )

two identical spin-half particles:


1
[α (1)β (2) − α (2) β (1)] singlet
2
1
α (1)α (2) [α (1)β (2) + α (2)β (1)] β (1) β (2)
2
(triplet: S = 1 ms = 1,0, −1)

⎧ sym × sym
Ψ S = spatial × spin = ⎨
⎩ antisym × antisym
Ψ A = oneA × otherS
SM355 – 2005 5 22 September/Tut7
Pauli exclusion principle: no two identical fermions in a
system can be in the same state (have all the quantum
numbers the same) ⇒ antisymmetric total wavefunction
⇒ periodic table

• conduction electrons have small contribution to


specific heat
• superfluidity of 4He at low temperature: bosons
• Mott scattering: takes into account symmetry of
Ψ (note Rutherford does not take care of identical
particles)

symmetry is important when there’s significant overlap

Helium atom:

semi-classical Bohr model, modified to use


Coulomb electron-electron repulsion
electronic screening

can use first-order perturbation theory


one-particle hydrogen-like wave functions
perturbation: electron-electron interaction
split singlet and triplet states
good agreement
ground state energy level: variational theory, 2%
energy levels: specified by n, L, S, J
SM355 – 2005 6 22 September/Tut7
Many electrons:

Hartree self-consistent field method

“aufbau” method (one-particle hydrogen-like electron


states, Pauli exclusion principle) ⇒ periodic table, etc.

energy levels have large gaps: shells between gaps

SM355 – 2005 7 22 September/Tut7


Unit 16
Applications: the fine structure of
the hydrogen atom, and the binding of
the hydrogen molecular ion

spin-orbit

1 ⎛ e2 ⎞1 ˆ ˆ
δH
ˆ spin-orbit =
⎜ 4πε m 2 c 2 ⎟ r 3 L ⋅ S
2 ⎝ 0 ⎠
Thomas precession
relativistic

relativistic perturbation

expand classical relativistic KE as a Taylor series in


( p / mc) 2 , p → pˆ = −i ∇
( )
2
p
ˆ ⋅ p
ˆ
δHˆ rel = −
8m3c 2

e2 2
δH
ˆ Darwin = δ ( x)δ ( y )δ ( z )
8ε 0 m 2 c 2
Darwin term 2 2

( ψ,δ Hˆ Darwin ψ ) = 8ε m2c 2 ψ (0) 2


e
0
only for s-states of hydrogen atom (l = 0) (see Q1.9 1997)

SM355 – 2005 8 22 September/Tut7


calculate energy shifts due to perturbations:

l>0
1⎛ e2 ⎞ 2
δE (1)spin-orbit
= ⎜
n ,l ,l + 12
2 ⎝ 4πε 0 m 2 c 2 ⎟⎠ 2a03 ( l + 12 ) (l + 1) n3
1⎛ e2 ⎞ 2
δ En(1)spin-orbit =− ⎜
,l ,l −
2 ⎝ 4πε 0 m 2 c 2 ⎟⎠ 2a03 ( l + 12 ) n3
1
2

ER2 ⎧ 3 4 ⎫
δE (1)rel
= ⎨ − ⎬
2mc 2 ⎩ n 4 ( l + 12 ) n3 ⎭
n ,l , j

E ⎡ α2 ⎛ 1 3 ⎞⎤
(1) total
= − 2R ⎢ + − ⎥
n ⎝⎜ j + 12 4n ⎠⎟ ⎦
E n, j 1
n ⎣
e2 1
α ≡ fine structure constant = ≈
4πε 0 c 137

l = 0, no spin-orbit interaction, L ⋅ S = 0 for spherically


symmetric spatial wave function; still have relativistic
1⎛ e2 ⎞ 2
δ En,0, 1
(1)Darwin
= ⎜
2 ⎝ 4πε 0 m 2c 2 ⎟⎠ ( na0 )3
term
2

exactly the same as above for l = 0

others: positronium: electron and positron


quarkonium: quark and antiquark (QCD)
SM355 – 2005 9 22 September/Tut7
H +2 :

3-body Schrödinger equation: 6 independent coordinates


(not separable – not easy)

stationary nucleus model: Born-Oppenheimer model


(exact solutions exist)

variational method: 2 1s wave H wavefunctions


(binds, but dissociation energy too small)

H2 follows He – more tightly bound than H +2

SM355 – 2005 10 22 September/Tut7

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