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Universita’ dell’Insubria, Como, Italy The Fascinating Helium Dario Bressanini http://scienze-como.uninsubria.it/bressanini Crit05, Dresden 2005 The Beginning • First discovered in the Sun by Pierre Janssen and Norman Lockyer in 1868 • • First liquefied by Kamerlingh Onnes in 1908 First calculations by Egil Hylleraas and John Slater in 1928 2 Helium studies • Thousands of theoretical and experimental papers Hˆ n (R) En n (R) have been published on Helium, in its various forms: Atom Small Clusters Droplets Bulk 3 Plan of the Talk • Nodes of the Helium Atom: (R)=0 • Stability of mixed 3Hem4Hen clusters • Geometry of 4He3 (if time permits) 4 Nodes Nodes are region of N-dimensional space where (R)=0 • Why study Nodes of wave functions? They are very interesting mathematical Very little is known about them They have practical relevance especially in Quantum Monte Carlo Simulations 5 Nodes are relevant • Levinson Theorem: the number of nodes of the zero-energy scattering wave function gives the number of bound states • Fractional quantum Hall effect • Quantum Chaos Integrable system Chaotic system 6 Nodes and QMC If we knew the exact nodes of , we could exactly simulate the system by QMC methods + - We restrict random walk to a positive region bounded by (approximate) nodes. 7 Common misconception on nodes • Nodes are not fixed by antisymmetry alone, only a 3N-3 sub-dimensional subset 8 Common misconception on nodes • They have (almost) nothing to do with Orbital Nodes. It is (sometimes) possible to use nodeless orbitals 9 Common misconceptions on nodes • A common misconception is that on a node, two like-electrons are always close. This is not true 0 0 1 2 2 0 1 10 Common misconceptions on nodes • Nodal theorem is NOT VALID in N-Dimensions Higher energy states does not mean more nodes (Courant and Hilbert ) It is only an upper bound 11 Common misconceptions on nodes • Not even for the same symmetry species 3 2.5 2 1.5 1 0.5 Courant counterexample 0 0 0.5 1 1.5 2 2.5 3 12 The Helium triplet • First 3S state of He is one of very few systems where we know the exact node • For S states we can write (r1 , r2 , r12 ) •For the Pauli Principle (r1 , r2 , r12 ) (r2 , r1 , r12 ) • Which means that the node is r1 r2 or r1 r2 0 14 The Helium triplet node • Independent of r12 • The node is more symmetric than the wave function itself • It is a polynomial in r1 and r2 • Present in all 3S states of two-electron atoms r1 r12 r2 r1 r2 0 r1 r2 r1 r2 0 15 Helium 1s2p 3P o ( P ) z1 f (r1 , r2 , r12 ) z 2 f (r2 , r1 , r12 ) 3 0 The Wave function (J.B.Anderson 1987) is ( P ) ( g ( z1 , r1 ) g ( z 2 , r2 )) (r1 , r2 , r12 ) 3 0 •node independent from r12 (numerical proof) 16 Other He states: 1s2s 2 1S • Although (r1 , r2 , 12 ), the node does not depend on 12 (or does very weakly) • A very good approximation of the node is 4 4 r1 r2 const 12 r2 r1 Surface contour plot of the node 17 Casual similarity ? First unstable antisymmetric stretch orbit along with the symmetric Wannier orbit r1 = r2 and various equipotential lines 18 Other He states: 2 3S • The second triplet has similar properties "Almost" r15 r25 const 19 He: Other states • Other states have similar properties • Breit (1930) showed that (P e)= (x1 y2 – y1 x2) f(r1,r2,r12) 2p2 3P e : f( ) symmetric node = (x1 y2 – y1 x2) = 0 2p3p 1P e : f( ) antisymmetric node = (x1 y2 – y1 x2) (r1-r2) = 0 20 He: Hyperspherical Approximation • In the Hyperspherical approximation: ( R, ) F ( R)( R, ) R r r 2 1 2 2 • which means the first few S excited states have circular nodes.. 1s2s 3S 1s2s 1S 1s3s 1S 1s4s 3S They have the correct topology, and a shape close to the exact, which is more similar to r1k r2k Const 24 Helium Nodes Exact N (R)e f (R) • Independent from r12 • Higher symmetry than the wave function • Some are described by polynomials in distances and/or coordinates • Are these general properties of nodal surfaces ? • Is the Helium wave function separable in some (unknown) coordinate system? 25 Nodal Symmetry Conjecture WARNING: Conjecture Ahead... Symmetry of (some) nodes of is higher than symmetry of • Other systems apparently show this feature: Li atom, Be Atom, He2+ molecule 26 Be Nodal Topology r1+r2 r1+r2 r3-r4 r3-r4 r1-r2 HF 0 r1-r2 1s 2 2s 2 c 1s 2 2 p 2 CI 0 28 A (Nodal) song... He deals the cards to find the answers the secret geometry of chance the hidden law of a probable outcome the numbers lead a dance Sting: Shape of my heart 32 Helium Helium as an elementary particle. A weakly interacting hard sphere. Interatomic potential is known very accurately 3He (fermion: antisymmetric trial function, spin 1/2) 4He (boson: symmetric trial function, spin zero) Highly non-classical systems. No equilibrium structure. ab-initio methods and normal mode analysis useless High resolution spectroscopy Superfluidity Low temperature chemistry 33 4He n and 3He n Clusters Stability 4He n 4He dimer exists 2 4He3 All clusters bound Liquid: stable bound. Efimov effect? 3He 3He 2 dimer unbound m m = ? 20 < m < 33 critically bound. Probably m=32 (Guardiola & Navarro) Liquid: stable 35 Questions • When is 3Hem4Hen stable? • What is the spectrum of the 3He impurities? • Can we describe it using simple models (Harmonic Oscillator, Rotator,...) ? • What is the structure of these clusters? • What excited states do they have ? 36 3He 4He m n 3He 4He n 0 1 2 3 4 m Stability Chart 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 0 Bound L=0 1 Unbound 2 3 Unknown 4 L=1 S=1/2 5 L=1 S=1 Terra Incognita Bound 32 3He 4He 2 2 L=0 S=0 3He 4He 2 4 L=1 S=1 3He 4He 3 8 3He 4He 3 4 L=0 S=1/2 L=1 S=1/2 37 3He4He : n energies -1) (cm Total energies -1 E (cm ) 0 n=5 -2 n = 9 The p state appears at n=5 -4 The d state appears at n=9 L=0 L=1 L=2 -6 The f state (not shown) at n=19 -8 -10 2 4 6 8 10 12 n n 39 3He4He : n Total energies (cm-1) -44.5 3He4He energies 30 -45 g He30 -45.5 f Spectrum similar to the rigid rotator. Different than harmonic oscillator (sometimes used in the literature) -46 d -46.5 l=2 p s 1s2s -47 0 L (angular momentum) 2 4 6 l=1 l=0 40 3He4He : n 4He 0.01 3He 3He s p d f 0.008 0.006 Structure stays on the surface. Pushed outside as L increases 3He4He 7 : L = 1 state 0.004 0.002 0 0 10 20 30 40 41 3He 4He 2 n Clusters Stability Now put two 3He 3He 4He 2 3He 4He 2 2 Trimer unbound Tetramer bound 5 out of 6 unbound pairs 4He 4 3He4He 3 3He 4He 2 2 3He 4He 2 n All clusters up bound E = -0.3886(1) cm-1 E = -0.2062(1) cm-1 E = -0.071(1) cm-1 42 Evidence of 3He24He2 Kalinin, Kornilov and Toennies 43 3He 4He 2 n : energies relative to 4Hen 0 1P l = 1 ______ l = 0 ______ l = 1 ______ l = 0 ______ 1S l = 0 ______ S 0 1 1 0 1 0 s2 sp sp -1 E (cm-1) 3P -0.5 L -1.5 -2 -2.5 The 1P and 3P 0 4 states appear for n=4 8 12 16 20 n The energy of 3He24Hen is roughly equal to the 4Hen energy plus the 3He orbital energies. 44 What is the shape of 4He 3 ? The Shape of the Trimers Ne trimer r(Ne-center of mass) He trimer r(4He-center of mass) 47 Ne3 Angular Distributions a b Ne trimer b b a a 48 4He 3 a Angular Distributions b b b a a 49 Acknowledgments.. and a suggestion Peter Reynolds Silvia Tarasco Gabriele Morosi Take a look at your nodes 50