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Spectral Line Physics Atomic Structure and Energy Levels Atomic Transition Rates Molecular Structure and Transitions 1 Quantum Numbers (http://www.ess.sunysb.edu/fwalter/AST341/qn.html) • n, principal quantum number. Defines the distance of the electron from the nucleus in the Bohr model. • l, the azimuthal quantum number. l takes on the integral values 0, 1, 2, ... , n-2, n-1. Defines angular momentum. • m, the magnetic quantum number. m takes on the integral values -l , -(l-1), ..., -1, 0, 1, ..., (l-1), l. • s, the spin quantum number. This describes the spin of the electron, and is either +1/2 or -1/2. 2 3 Quantum Numbers • Pauli exclusion principle: no two electrons have the same set of the 4 quantum numbers n, l, m, s • There are 2n2 possible states for an electron with principal quantum number n (statistical weight). • The n=1 levels can contain only 2 electrons. This level is called the 1s orbit or the K shell (shells with n=1,2,3,4,5,6,7 are called the K, L, M, N, O, P, Q shells, respectively). • An orbit, or shell, containing the maximum number 2n2 electrons forms a closed shell. 4 Energy levels for n = 3 5 Quantum Numbers for Atoms • l =0, 1, 2, 3,4 s, p, d, f, g • total orbital ang. mmt. for multielectron systems L =0, 1, 2, 3,4 S, P, D, F, G • S is total spin • J=L+S is the total angular mmt. (2J+1) degenerate levels for each J unless magnetic field applied (Zeeman splitting) or electric field applied (Stark effect). 6 Spectroscopic Notation • The atomic level is described as n 2S+1LJ where S, n, and J are the quantum numbers, and L is the term (S,P,D,F,G, etc.). 2S+1 is the multiplicity. • Ground state of Boron: 1s22s22p1 configuration, with 2 e- in the n=1 level (l=0), 2 e- in the n=2, l=0 s orbital, and last e- in the 2p orbital. The ground state of Boron has a 2P1/2 term. • Closed shells always have a 1S0 term. 7 Selection Rules (Electric Dipole): Permitted and Forbidden Transitions • • • • • ΔL = 0, +/- 1 Δl = 1 ΔJ = 0, +/- 1, except that J=0 -> J=0 is forbidden. ΔS = 0 ΔM = 0, +/- 1, except that M=0 -> M=0 is forbidden if ΔJ=0. • As the atoms become more complex, strict L-S coupling fails and selection rules weaken • http://physics.nist.gov/Pubs/AtSpec/node17.html 8 Multiplets • Transitions arising from a one term to another term give rise to a multiplet. • The multiplicity of a term is given by 2S+1. S=0 is a singlet term; S=1/2 is a doublet term; S=1 is a triplet term; S=3/2 is a quartet term ... • Alkali metals (S=1/2) form doublets (Li, Na, K ...). • Ions with 2 e- in outer shell (He I, Ca I, Mg I) form singlets or triplets. 9 Neutral Sodium Grotrian Diagram • Outer e- n=3 • Energy depends on l • Δl rule applies • Na D line from 3p spin difference 10 Neutral Helium Grotrian Diagram • one e- in 1s state • e- spin interactions in multi e- cases: L-S coupling • total spin=0,1 1S singlet 3S triplet • e- stuck in high E level is metastable 11 M Degeneracy Broken By Magnetic Fields - Zeeman Effect • Normal Zeeman effect operates in a singlet state and results in three lines: lines with ΔM = 0, the π components, are unshifted, polarized parallel to the field; lines with ΔM = +/- 1, the σ components, are shifted by +/- 4.7 X 10-13g λ2B, where g = Lande g factor, λ = wavelength, and B = strength of the magnetic field in Gauss. • g = 1 + (J(J+1) + S(S+1) - L(L+1))/2J(J+1) 12 Hyperfine Structure • Coupling between the magnetic moment of electron and the nuclear magnetic moment • Quantum number I = net nuclear spin • Construct F=I+J, for J-I,J-I+1, ... J+I-1, J+I. • 2S1/2 ground state of H has J=1/2, I=1/2 (because the spin of the proton is ½). F=1 corresponds to parallel spins for p and eF=0 to anti-parallel spins (lower energy) Energy difference: 1420 MHz or 21 cm. 13 Typical Energies of Interaction • Central potential (configurations) 4 eV • Electrostatic interaction (L-S coupling, terms) 0.4 eV • Spin-orbit interaction (e- magnetic field and e- magnetic moment; fine structure) 10-4 to 10-1 eV • Hyperfine structure (nuclear spin, isotope) 10-7 to 10-4 eV 14 Transition Probabilities (Mihalas Section 4.2) • Recall Einstein coefficients for b-b transitions • Express actual cross section with oscillator strength fij e 2 h ij tot f ij Bij 4 mc • fij from QM calculation (based on volume coincidence of wave functions of two states) or laboratory measurements • Tabulated with the statistical weight: log gf • http://www.nist.gov/pml/data/atomspec.cfm 15 Molecular Structure (Robinson 2007; Tennyson 2005) • Molecules exist in cool atmospheres • Consider simple diatomic molecule where differences create dipole moment: ex. CO • Quantum numbers rule the rotation rates, vibrational states, electronic states • Interaction with light causes transitions between states (similarly to atomic boundbound transitions) 16 Rotational States: 2 axes 17 Vibrational transition: With Rotational Level Change +/-1 18 Vibration-Rotation Transitions 19 20 21 Molecular bands • Transition between two electron energy levels splits into series of vibrational transitions, each of which splits into several rotation transitions. • Result is molecular band in spectrum in which large numbers of lines collect at the band head at the short wavelength end • http://www.nist.gov/pml/data/molspecdata.cfm http://spec.jpl.nasa.gov/ftp/pub/catalog/catform.html 22