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PHY - DAV Autonomous College Titilagarh
PHY - DAV Autonomous College Titilagarh

Document
Document

... E.g.2. Waves in two dimensions: Modes of a drumhead Standing waves can also be generated on a surface or thin membrane. A drumhead has a fixed perimeter, and oscillations on this surface lead to more complicated patterns of displacement and nodes First, consider the fundamental mode of the membrane. ...
Quantum Chemistry
Quantum Chemistry

... E.g.2. Waves in two dimensions: Modes of a drumhead Standing waves can also be generated on a surface or thin membrane. A drumhead has a fixed perimeter, and oscillations on this surface lead to more complicated patterns of displacement and nodes First, consider the fundamental mode of the membrane. ...
An introduction to spherically symmetric loop quantum gravity black
An introduction to spherically symmetric loop quantum gravity black

arXiv:0911.1876 - Harvard University
arXiv:0911.1876 - Harvard University

Original
Original

Modern Physics
Modern Physics

Pdf
Pdf

... of the heavier particles. One encounters this situation, for example, in photochemical reactions involving nonradiative transitions, and in oxidation-reduction or proton transfer reactions in liquid solutions. Accurate description of structure and dynamics in liquid metals and reactions at metal sur ...
Rigorous Approach to Bose-Einstein Condensation
Rigorous Approach to Bose-Einstein Condensation

... The subject of Bose-Einstein condensation first entered the scene of theoretical physics in 1924 when Einstein predicted a phase transition in the most popular spin-one particle system known at that time - photons. His paper was based on previous ideas by Bose on the statistics of light quanta. The ...
The Dance of Molecules - American Chemical Society
The Dance of Molecules - American Chemical Society

... nian is a quantum Hamiltonian. Quantum mechanics is notorious for being difficult to understand in the terms in which we experience the everyday world. In the early days when scientists were groping their way toward quantum mechanics, the only way forward was to try to link classical and quantum con ...
Atomic Systems and Bonding
Atomic Systems and Bonding

The Helium Atom - Oxford Academic
The Helium Atom - Oxford Academic

... words, the phase space structure of the hydrogenic motion of two independent electrons depends on an (infinitesimal) perturbation and not only on the zero-order Hamiltonian itself. As a matter of fact, it was only recently shown that the motion of two-electron atoms is not ergodic. 7 > In this contr ...
The Early Universe in Loop Quantum Cosmology
The Early Universe in Loop Quantum Cosmology

... has a discrete spectrum. Moreover, there is only an operator for the exponential of c, not c directly. Both properties are very different from the corresponding operators in the Wheeler– DeWitt quantization where the analog of p, the scale factor a, has a continuous spectrum and its momentum has a di ...
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03-2003

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physical setting chemistry

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Dynamical model of nuclear motion in the Auger emission spectrum

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Atomic Systems and Bonding

Question, hints, and answers. Look at hints if you need help. Look at
Question, hints, and answers. Look at hints if you need help. Look at

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CC_3_24.7.2013

... theory. Although the two formulations are mathematically equivalent, Schrödinger presented his theory in terms of partial differential equations and, within this framework, the energy of an isolated molecule can be obtained by the solution of a wave equation called the Schrödinger equation. Schrödin ...
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Chapter 6 Electronic Structure of Atoms
Chapter 6 Electronic Structure of Atoms

Ab initio Quantum and ab initio Molecular Dynamics of the
Ab initio Quantum and ab initio Molecular Dynamics of the

... packed metal surfaces usually no significant surface rearrangement upon adsorption occurs, and there is only a small energy transfer from the light hydrogen molecule to the heavy substrate atoms. Even if there is any surface relaxation upon hydrogen adsorption, it occurs typically on a much larger t ...
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1- Harmonic Oscillator in an impenetrable N - An

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Dirac Equation

... because two and only two 'directions' of spin would be allowed, up and down. (c)The conclusion that the electron would "tear itself apart" through rotation. It was pointed out that, in order that the electron produce a magnetic field of the required strength, it would have to be spinning at an incre ...
+1/2 - WordPress.com
+1/2 - WordPress.com

< 1 ... 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 ... 252 >

Molecular Hamiltonian

In atomic, molecular, and optical physics and quantum chemistry, the molecular Hamiltonian is the Hamiltonian operator representing the energy of the electrons and nuclei in a molecule. This operator and the associated Schrödinger equation play a central role in computational chemistry and physics for computing properties of molecules and aggregates of molecules, such as thermal conductivity, specific heat, electrical conductivity, optical, and magnetic properties, and reactivity.The elementary parts of a molecule are the nuclei, characterized by their atomic numbers, Z, and the electrons, which have negative elementary charge, −e. Their interaction gives a nuclear charge of Z + q, where q = −eN, with N equal to the number of electrons. Electrons and nuclei are, to a very good approximation, point charges and point masses. The molecular Hamiltonian is a sum of several terms: its major terms are the kinetic energies of the electrons and the Coulomb (electrostatic) interactions between the two kinds of charged particles. The Hamiltonian that contains only the kinetic energies of electrons and nuclei, and the Coulomb interactions between them, is known as the Coulomb Hamiltonian. From it are missing a number of small terms, most of which are due to electronic and nuclear spin.Although it is generally assumed that the solution of the time-independent Schrödinger equation associated with the Coulomb Hamiltonian will predict most properties of the molecule, including its shape (three-dimensional structure), calculations based on the full Coulomb Hamiltonian are very rare. The main reason is that its Schrödinger equation is very difficult to solve. Applications are restricted to small systems like the hydrogen molecule.Almost all calculations of molecular wavefunctions are based on the separation of the Coulomb Hamiltonian first devised by Born and Oppenheimer. The nuclear kinetic energy terms are omitted from the Coulomb Hamiltonian and one considers the remaining Hamiltonian as a Hamiltonian of electrons only. The stationary nuclei enter the problem only as generators of an electric potential in which the electrons move in a quantum mechanical way. Within this framework the molecular Hamiltonian has been simplified to the so-called clamped nucleus Hamiltonian, also called electronic Hamiltonian, that acts only on functions of the electronic coordinates.Once the Schrödinger equation of the clamped nucleus Hamiltonian has been solved for a sufficient number of constellations of the nuclei, an appropriate eigenvalue (usually the lowest) can be seen as a function of the nuclear coordinates, which leads to a potential energy surface. In practical calculations the surface is usually fitted in terms of some analytic functions. In the second step of the Born–Oppenheimer approximation the part of the full Coulomb Hamiltonian that depends on the electrons is replaced by the potential energy surface. This converts the total molecular Hamiltonian into another Hamiltonian that acts only on the nuclear coordinates. In the case of a breakdown of the Born–Oppenheimer approximation—which occurs when energies of different electronic states are close—the neighboring potential energy surfaces are needed, see this article for more details on this.The nuclear motion Schrödinger equation can be solved in a space-fixed (laboratory) frame, but then the translational and rotational (external) energies are not accounted for. Only the (internal) atomic vibrations enter the problem. Further, for molecules larger than triatomic ones, it is quite common to introduce the harmonic approximation, which approximates the potential energy surface as a quadratic function of the atomic displacements. This gives the harmonic nuclear motion Hamiltonian. Making the harmonic approximation, we can convert the Hamiltonian into a sum of uncoupled one-dimensional harmonic oscillator Hamiltonians. The one-dimensional harmonic oscillator is one of the few systems that allows an exact solution of the Schrödinger equation.Alternatively, the nuclear motion (rovibrational) Schrödinger equation can be solved in a special frame (an Eckart frame) that rotates and translates with the molecule. Formulated with respect to this body-fixed frame the Hamiltonian accounts for rotation, translation and vibration of the nuclei. Since Watson introduced in 1968 an important simplification to this Hamiltonian, it is often referred to as Watson's nuclear motion Hamiltonian, but it is also known as the Eckart Hamiltonian.
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