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Test 2 - Northwest Florida State College
Test 2 - Northwest Florida State College

... 2) Know fixed charged ions, including their names and charges (see table below). 3) Know formulas and names of polyatomic ions (see table below). 4) Be able to name (with systematic name) and write chemical formulas of ionic compounds containing fixed charges ions, variable charged ions or polyatomi ...
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... Let us consider now the numerical solution of the (time-independent) Schrödinger equation in one dimension. The basic assumption is that the equation can be discretized, i.e. written on a suitable finite grid of points, and integrated, i.e. solved, the solution being also given on the grid of point ...
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...  The formula of a compound that expresses the smallest whole number ratio of the atoms present.  Ionic formula are always empirical formula Molecular Formula  The formula that states the actual number of each kind of atom found in one molecule of the compound. If C6H12O6 is the molecular formula, ...
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... On the average, the binding energy of nuclei increases linearly with the number of nucleons. But after the closure of a Shell the increase of binding energy of the next nucleons undergo a drop. It is customarily believed, in the IPM, that these shell effects proceed from the potential well. In the H ...
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Coupled cluster

Coupled cluster (CC) is a numerical technique used for describing many-body systems. Its most common use is as one of several post-Hartree–Fock ab initio quantum chemistry methods in the field of computational chemistry. It essentially takes the basic Hartree–Fock molecular orbital method and constructs multi-electron wavefunctions using the exponential cluster operator to account for electron correlation. Some of the most accurate calculations for small to medium-sized molecules use this method.The method was initially developed by Fritz Coester and Hermann Kümmel in the 1950s for studying nuclear physics phenomena, but became more frequently used when in 1966 Jiři Čížek (and later together with Josef Paldus) reformulated the method for electron correlation in atoms and molecules. It is now one of the most prevalent methods in quantum chemistry that includes electronic correlation.CC theory is simply the perturbative variant of the Many Electron Theory (MET) of Oktay Sinanoğlu, which is the exact (and variational) solution of the many electron problem, so it was also called ""Coupled Pair MET (CPMET)"". J. Čížek used the correlation function of MET and used Goldstone type perturbation theory to get the energy expression while original MET was completely variational. Čížek first developed the Linear-CPMET and then generalized it to full CPMET in the same paper in 1966. He then also performed an application of it on benzene molecule with O. Sinanoğlu in the same year. Because MET is somewhat difficult to perform computationally, CC is simpler and thus, in today's computational chemistry, CC is the best variant of MET and gives highly accurate results in comparison to experiments.
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