• Study Resource
  • Explore Categories
    • Arts & Humanities
    • Business
    • Engineering & Technology
    • Foreign Language
    • History
    • Math
    • Science
    • Social Science

    Top subcategories

    • Advanced Math
    • Algebra
    • Basic Math
    • Calculus
    • Geometry
    • Linear Algebra
    • Pre-Algebra
    • Pre-Calculus
    • Statistics And Probability
    • Trigonometry
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Astronomy
    • Astrophysics
    • Biology
    • Chemistry
    • Earth Science
    • Environmental Science
    • Health Science
    • Physics
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Anthropology
    • Law
    • Political Science
    • Psychology
    • Sociology
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Accounting
    • Economics
    • Finance
    • Management
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Aerospace Engineering
    • Bioengineering
    • Chemical Engineering
    • Civil Engineering
    • Computer Science
    • Electrical Engineering
    • Industrial Engineering
    • Mechanical Engineering
    • Web Design
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Architecture
    • Communications
    • English
    • Gender Studies
    • Music
    • Performing Arts
    • Philosophy
    • Religious Studies
    • Writing
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Ancient History
    • European History
    • US History
    • World History
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Croatian
    • Czech
    • Finnish
    • Greek
    • Hindi
    • Japanese
    • Korean
    • Persian
    • Swedish
    • Turkish
    • other →
 
Profile Documents Logout
Upload
Electric dipoles at ultralow temperatures
Electric dipoles at ultralow temperatures

... With these basics in mind, we can move on to molecules. We focus here on diatomic, heteronuclear molecules, although the principles are more general. We will consider only electric fields so small that the electrons cannot be polarized in the sense of the previous section; thus we consider only a sin ...
Five ways to the nonresonant dynamic Stark effect
Five ways to the nonresonant dynamic Stark effect

... presence of an external electric field. It was discovered in 1913 by Stark1 and is a mainstay of the undergraduate and graduate physics curriculum. Numerous textbooks such as Refs. 2–4 discuss the Stark effect due to a static field. A similar effect occurs in the oscillating electric fields produced ...
Topological insulators
Topological insulators

... This leads to what is known as “dissipationless” transport by the edge states – no electrons scatter and so no energy is lost as heat – and is ultimately responsible for the precise quantized transport. Unlike the quantum Hall effect, which is only seen when a strong magnetic field is present, topol ...
Spin-orbit coupling in superconductor-normal metal
Spin-orbit coupling in superconductor-normal metal

Chem 111 2:30p section Final Exam
Chem 111 2:30p section Final Exam

... This exam is composed of 50 questions, 14 of which require mathematics that require a calculator. Go initially through the exam and answer the questions you can answer quickly. Then go back and try the ones that are more challenging to you and/or that require calculations. As discussed in the course ...
The Dynamics of General Relativity
The Dynamics of General Relativity

... relativity, since its Lagrangian may be written in a form linear in the time derivatives (which is called the Palatini form). The type of variable fulfilling the second requirement is dictated by the desire for canonical form, and will be seen also to possess a natural geometrical interpretation. Th ...
Dirac Equation
Dirac Equation

Baryons in O (4) and Vibron Model
Baryons in O (4) and Vibron Model

Thesis - Institut für Physik
Thesis - Institut für Physik

... When describing the dynamics of N  1 interacting, identical, bosonic particles under the influence of external forces, the many-body wavefunction, Ψ(r1 , ..., rN ; t), is the natural starting point. Knowing this function, the condensate’s atoms and their dynamics can be described by the many-body S ...
The Physics of Metal Clusters - Nano
The Physics of Metal Clusters - Nano

... where IN is the abundance intensity for an N-atom cluster and k is Boltzmann's constant. Figure (4b) shows a comparison between the experimental abundance spectrum and ∆2 for Na clusters. The peaks in ∆2 coincide with the discontinuities in the mass spectra. This result represented the first confirm ...
Resonant X-ray Emission Spectroscopy
Resonant X-ray Emission Spectroscopy

... In Figure 1 these spectroscopic processes are shown schematically for a simple case, where the VES consists of a filled valence band and an empty conduction band. In Figure 2 this schematic representation is replaced by the measured data for three different sulphide samples. In the case of XAS, a co ...
Final Exam 4
Final Exam 4

Lecture Notes on Statistical Mechanics and Thermodynamics
Lecture Notes on Statistical Mechanics and Thermodynamics

... 1. Introduction and Historical Overview As the name suggests, thermodynamics historically developed as an attempt to understand phenomena involving heat. This notion is intimately related to irreversible processes involving typically many, essentially randomly excited, degrees of freedom. The prope ...
Reflections on Friction in Quantum Mechanics
Reflections on Friction in Quantum Mechanics

... quantum system with a discrete energy spectrum (we will further assume non-degeneracy for simplicity). P An ensemble will have some average energy E = pi Ei (where pi = p(Ei ) is the probability to find the system in a certain energy eigenstate). A rapid change in external constraints corresponds to ...
Particle Physics
Particle Physics

Part III Particle Physics 2008 : The Dirac Equation
Part III Particle Physics 2008 : The Dirac Equation

... These problems motivated Dirac (1928) to search for a different formulation of relativistic quantum mechanics in which all particle densities are positive. The resulting wave equation had solutions which not only solved this problem but also fully describe the intrinsic spin and magnetic moment of ...
Floquet topological insulators Phys. Stat. Sol. Rap
Floquet topological insulators Phys. Stat. Sol. Rap

... 1 Introduction Topological phases, including topological insulators (TIs) [1–5] and Chern insulators (CIs) [6– 10], represent unique states of matter owing to the robust, topological protection of their conducting edge or surface states. CIs (also called quantum anomalous Hall phases) appear in latt ...
Spatial ordering of charge and spin in quasi-one
Spatial ordering of charge and spin in quasi-one

College Chemistry 1 Note Guide(free download)
College Chemistry 1 Note Guide(free download)

Performance of Many–Body Perturbation Theory
Performance of Many–Body Perturbation Theory

Two-electron state from the Floquet scattering matrix perspective
Two-electron state from the Floquet scattering matrix perspective

1 Why do we need position operator in quantum theory?
1 Why do we need position operator in quantum theory?

Derivation of the Equation E=mc2-v3.odt
Derivation of the Equation E=mc2-v3.odt

4. Introducing Conformal Field Theory
4. Introducing Conformal Field Theory

... Weyl invariance will reduce to a conformally invariant theory when the background metric is fixed. Similarly, any conformally invariant theory can be coupled to 2d gravity where it will give rise to a classical theory which enjoys both diffeomorphism and Weyl invariance. Notice the caveat “classical ...
physical setting chemistry
physical setting chemistry

< 1 ... 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 ... 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.
  • studyres.com © 2025
  • DMCA
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Report