A Classical Description of Spectros
A Classical Description of Spectros
http://ocw.mit.edu
For information about citing these materials or our Terms of Use, visit: http://ocw.mit.edu/terms.
-1
Here, for the field, we have only considered the time-dependence E ( t ) = E0 cos (ωt ) and the
ω02 − ω 2
Where tan β = . (9)
2γω
So this solution to the displacement of the particle says that the amplitude certainly depends on the
magnitude of the driving force, but more importantly on the resonance condition. The frequency
of the driving field should match the natural resonance frequency of the system, ω0 ≈ ω …like
-3
pushing someone on a swing. When you drive the system at the resonance frequency there will be
an efficient transfer of power to the oscillator, but if you push with arbitrary frequency, nothing
will happen. Indeed, that is what an absorption spectrum is: a measure of the power absorbed by
the system from the field.
Notice that the coordinate oscillates at the driving frequency ω and not at the resonance
frequency ω0. Also, the particle oscillates as a sin, that is, 90° out-of-phase with the field when
driven on resonance. This reflects the fact that the maximum force can be exerted on the particle
when it is stationary at the turning points. The phase shift β, depends varies with the detuning
from resonance.
Now we can make some simplifications to eq. (8) and calculate the absorption spectrum.
For weak damping γ << ω0 and near resonance ω0 ≈ ω , we can write
The absorption spectrum is a measure of the power transferred to the oscillator, so we can calculate
it by finding the power absorbed from the force on the oscillator times the velocity, averaged over
a cycle of the field.
∂Q
Pavg = F (t ) ⋅
∂t avg
(11)
γ F02 1
=
2m (ω − ω )2 + γ 2
0