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Particle in a spherically symmetric potential

 

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Particle in a spherically symmetric potential



 
 
In quantum mechanics
Quantum mechanics

Quantum mechanics is a set of principles underlying the most fundamental known description of all physical systems at the microscopic scale . Notable amongst these principles are both a dual wave-like and particle-like behavior of matter and radiation, and prediction of probabilities in situations where classical physics predicts certaintie...
, the particle in a spherically symmetric potential describes the dynamics of a particle in a potential
Potential

*The mathematical study of potentials is known as potential theory; it is the study of harmonic functions on manifolds. This mathematical formulation arises from the fact that, in physics, the scalar potential is irrotational, and thus has a vanishing Laplacian ? the very definition of a harmonic function....
 which has spherical symmetry. The Hamiltonian
Hamiltonian

Hamiltonian may refer toIn mathematics:* Hamiltonian system* Hamiltonian path, in graph theory* Hamiltonian group, in group theory* Hamiltonian ...
 for such a system has the form

where denotes the mass of the particle in the potential.

In its quantum mechanical formulation, it amounts to solving the Schrödinger equation
Schrödinger equation

In physics, especially quantum mechanics, the Schr?dinger equation is an equation that describes how the quantum state of a physical system changes in time....
 with the potential V(r) which depend only on r, the modulus of r.






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In quantum mechanics
Quantum mechanics

Quantum mechanics is a set of principles underlying the most fundamental known description of all physical systems at the microscopic scale . Notable amongst these principles are both a dual wave-like and particle-like behavior of matter and radiation, and prediction of probabilities in situations where classical physics predicts certaintie...
, the particle in a spherically symmetric potential describes the dynamics of a particle in a potential
Potential

*The mathematical study of potentials is known as potential theory; it is the study of harmonic functions on manifolds. This mathematical formulation arises from the fact that, in physics, the scalar potential is irrotational, and thus has a vanishing Laplacian ? the very definition of a harmonic function....
 which has spherical symmetry. The Hamiltonian
Hamiltonian

Hamiltonian may refer toIn mathematics:* Hamiltonian system* Hamiltonian path, in graph theory* Hamiltonian group, in group theory* Hamiltonian ...
 for such a system has the form

where denotes the mass of the particle in the potential.

In its quantum mechanical formulation, it amounts to solving the Schrödinger equation
Schrödinger equation

In physics, especially quantum mechanics, the Schr?dinger equation is an equation that describes how the quantum state of a physical system changes in time....
 with the potential V(r) which depend only on r, the modulus of r. Due to the spherical symmetry of the system it is useful to use spherical coordinates r, and . When this is done, the time independent Schrödinger equation
Schrödinger equation

In physics, especially quantum mechanics, the Schr?dinger equation is an equation that describes how the quantum state of a physical system changes in time....
 for the system is separable
Separation of variables

In mathematics, separation of variables is any of several methods for solving ordinary and partial differential equations, in which algebra allows one to rewrite an equation so that each of two variables occurs on a different side of the equation....
.

Structure of the eigenfunctions


The eigenfunction
Eigenfunction

In mathematics, an eigenfunction of a linear operator, A, defined on some function space is any non-zero function f in that space that returns from the operator exactly as is, except for a multiplicative scaling factor....
s of the Schrödinger equation
Schrödinger equation

In physics, especially quantum mechanics, the Schr?dinger equation is an equation that describes how the quantum state of a physical system changes in time....
 have the form in which the spherical polar angles
Spherical angle

A spherical angle is a particular dihedral angle; it is the angle between two intersecting arcs on a sphere, and is measured by the angle between the planes containing the arcs ....
 ? and f represent the colatitude
Colatitude

In spherical coordinates, colatitude is the complementary angle of the latitude, i.e. the difference between 90° and the latitude....
 and azimuth
Azimuth

An Azimuth is the angle from a reference vector space in a reference plane to a second vector in the same plane, pointing toward, , something of interest....
al angle, respectively. The last two factors of ? are often grouped together as spherical harmonics
Spherical harmonics

In mathematics, the spherical harmonics are the angular portion of an orthogonal set of solutions to Laplace's equation represented in a system of spherical coordinates....
, so that the eigenfunctions take the form

The differential equation which characterizes the function is called the radial equation.

Derivation of the radial equation


The kinetic energy operator in spherical polar coordinates is

The spherical harmonics
Spherical harmonics

In mathematics, the spherical harmonics are the angular portion of an orthogonal set of solutions to Laplace's equation represented in a system of spherical coordinates....
 satisfy .

Substituting this into the Schrödinger equation
Schrödinger equation

In physics, especially quantum mechanics, the Schr?dinger equation is an equation that describes how the quantum state of a physical system changes in time....
 we get a one-dimensional eigenvalue equation,

Relationship with 1-D Schrödinger equation

Note that the first term in the kinetic energy can be rewritten . This follows because both sides of this equation can be shown by application of the product rule
Product rule

In calculus, the product rule is a formula used to find the derivatives of products of functions.It may be stated thus:or in the Leibniz notation thus:...
 to be equal to a third form of this operator:

If subsequently the substitution is made into

the radial equation becomes

which is precisely a Schrödinger equation for the function u(r) with an effective potential given by

where the radial coordinate r ranges from 0 to . The correction to the potential V(r) is called the centrifugal barrier term.

Solutions for potentials of interest

Five special cases arise, of special importance:
  1. V(r)=0, or solving the vacuum in the basis of spherical harmonic
    Spherical Harmonic

    Spherical Harmonic is a science fiction novel from the Saga of the Skolian Empire series of books by Catherine Asaro which tells the story of Pharaoh Dyhianna Selei , ruler of the Skolian Empire, after the Radiance War fought by the Imperialate and their enemy Eubians....
    s, which serves as the basis for other cases.
  2. (finite) for and 0 elsewhere, or a particle in the spherical equivalent of the square well
    Particle in a box

    In physics, the particle in a box is a problem consisting of a single particle inside of an infinitely deep potential well, from which it cannot escape, and which loses no energy when it collides with the walls of the box....
    , useful to describe scattering and bound state
    Bound state

    In physics, a bound state is a composite of two or more building blocks that behaves as a single object. In quantum mechanics , a bound state is a state in the Hilbert space that corresponds to two or more particles whose interaction energy is negative, and therefore these particles cannot be separated unless energy is spent....
    s in a nucleus
    Atomic nucleus

    The nucleus of an atom is the very dense region, consisting of nucleons , at the center of an atom. Although the size of the nucleus varies considerably according to the mass of the atom, the size of the entire atom is comparatively constant....
     or quantum dot.
  3. As the previous case, but with an infinitely high jump in the potential on the surface of the sphere.
  4. V(r)~r² for the three-dimensional isotropic harmonic oscillator.
  5. V(r)~1/r to describe bound states of hydrogen-like atom
    Hydrogen-like atom

    A hydrogen-like atom is an atom with one electron and thus is isoelectronic with hydrogen. Except for the hydrogen atom itself these atoms carry the positive charge e, where Z is the atomic number of the atom....
    s.


We outline the solutions in these cases, which should be compared to their counterparts in cartesian coordinates, cf. particle in a box
Particle in a box

In physics, the particle in a box is a problem consisting of a single particle inside of an infinitely deep potential well, from which it cannot escape, and which loses no energy when it collides with the walls of the box....
. This article relies heavily on Bessel function
Bessel function

In mathematics, Bessel functions, first defined by the mathematician Daniel Bernoulli and generalized by Friedrich Bessel, are Canonical#Mathematics solutions y of Bessel's differential equation:...
s and Laguerre polynomials.

Vacuum case


Let us now consider V(r)=0 (if , replace everywhere E with ). Introducing the dimensionless variable

the equation becomes a Bessel equation for J defined by (whence the notational choice of J):

which regular solutions for positive energies are given by so-called Bessel functions of the first kind so that the solutions written for R are the so-called Spherical Bessel function .

The solutions of Schrödinger equation in polar coordinates for a particle of mass in vacuum are labelled by three quantum numbers: discrete indices l and m, and k varying continuously in : where , are the spherical Bessel function and are the spherical harmonics.

These solutions represent states of definite angular momentum, rather than of definite (linear) momentum, which are provided by plane waves .

Sphere with square potential


Let us now consider the potential for and elsewhere. That is, inside a sphere of radius the potential is equal to V0 and it is zero outside the sphere. A potential with such a finite discontinuity is called a square potential.

We first consider bound states, i.e., states which display the particle mostly inside the box (confined states). Those have an energy E less than the potential outside the sphere, i.e., they have negative energy, and we shall see that there are a discrete number of such states, which we shall compare to positive energy with a continuous spectrum, describing scattering on the sphere (of unbound states). Also worth noticing is that unlike Coulomb potential, featuring an infinite number of discrete bound states, the spherical square well has only a finite (if any) number because of its finite range (if it has finite depth).

The resolution essentially follows that of the vacuum with normalization of the total wavefunction added, solving two Schrödinger equations — inside and outside the sphere — of the previous kind, i.e., with constant potential. Also the following constraints hold:
  1. The wavefunction must be regular at the origin.
  2. The wavefunction and its derivative must be continuous at the potential discontinuity.
  3. The wavefunction must converge at infinity.


The first constraint comes from the fact that Neumann N
Bessel function

In mathematics, Bessel functions, first defined by the mathematician Daniel Bernoulli and generalized by Friedrich Bessel, are Canonical#Mathematics solutions y of Bessel's differential equation:...
 and Hankel H functions
Bessel function

In mathematics, Bessel functions, first defined by the mathematician Daniel Bernoulli and generalized by Friedrich Bessel, are Canonical#Mathematics solutions y of Bessel's differential equation:...
 are nonsingular at the origin. The physical argument that ? must be defined everywhere selected Bessel function of the first kind J
Bessel function

In mathematics, Bessel functions, first defined by the mathematician Daniel Bernoulli and generalized by Friedrich Bessel, are Canonical#Mathematics solutions y of Bessel's differential equation:...
 over the other possibilities in the vacuum case. For the same reason, the solution will be of this kind inside the sphere:

with A a constant to be determined later. Note that for bound states, .

Bound states bring the novelty as compared to the vacuum case that E is now negative (in the vacuum it was to be positive). This, along with third constraint, selects Hankel function of the first kind as the only converging solution at infinity (the singularity at the origin of these functions does not matter since we are now outside the sphere):

Second constraint on continuity of ? at along with normalization allows the determination of constants A and B. Continuity of the derivative (or logarithmic derivative
Logarithmic derivative

In mathematics, specifically in calculus and complex analysis, the logarithmic derivative of a function f is defined by the formulawhere f ′ is the derivative of f....
 for convenience) requires quantization of energy.

Sphere with infinite square potential


In case where the potential well is infinitely deep, so that we can take inside the sphere and outside, the problem becomes that of matching the wavefunction inside the sphere (the spherical Bessel functions) with identically zero wavefunction outside the sphere. Allowed energies are those for which the radial wavefunction vanishes at the boundary. Thus, we use the zeros of the spherical Bessel functions to find the energy spectrum and wavefunctions. Calling the kth zero of , we have:

So that one is reduced to the computations of these zeros .

3D isotropic harmonic oscillator

The potential of a 3D isotropic harmonic oscillator
Quantum harmonic oscillator

The quantum harmonic oscillator is the quantum mechanics analogue of the harmonic oscillator. It is one of the most important model systems in quantum mechanics because an arbitrary potential can be approximated as a harmonic potential at the vicinity of a stable equilibrium point....
 is In this article
Quantum harmonic oscillator

The quantum harmonic oscillator is the quantum mechanics analogue of the harmonic oscillator. It is one of the most important model systems in quantum mechanics because an arbitrary potential can be approximated as a harmonic potential at the vicinity of a stable equilibrium point....
 it is shown that an N-dimensional isotropic harmonic oscillator has the energies , i.e., n is a non-negative integral number; ? is the (same) fundamental frequency of the N modes of the oscillator. In this case N = 3, so that the radial Schrödinger equation becomes,

Introducing and recalling that , we will show that the radial Schrödinger equation has the normalized solution,

where the function is a generalized Laguerre polynomial
Laguerre polynomials

In mathematics, the Laguerre polynomials, named after Edmond Laguerre ,are the canonical solutions of Laguerre's equation:which is a second-order linear differential equation....
 in ?r ² of order k (i.e., the highest power of the polynomial is proportional to ?kr2k).

The normalization constant Nnl is,

The eigenfunction Rn,l(r) belongs to energy En and is to be multiplied by the spherical harmonic , where

This is the same result as given in this article
Quantum harmonic oscillator

The quantum harmonic oscillator is the quantum mechanics analogue of the harmonic oscillator. It is one of the most important model systems in quantum mechanics because an arbitrary potential can be approximated as a harmonic potential at the vicinity of a stable equilibrium point....
 if we realize that .

Derivation
First we transform the radial equation by a few successive substitutions to the generalized Laguerre differential equation, which has known solutions: the generalized Laguerre functions. Then we normalize the generalized Laguerre functions to unity. This normalization is with the usual volume element r² dr.

First we scale
Nondimensionalization

Nondimensionalization is the partial or full removal of Units of measurements from a mathematical equation by a suitable substitution of variables....
 the radial coordinate and then the equation becomes with .

Consideration of the limiting behaviour of v(y) at the origin and at infinity suggests the following substitution for v(y), This substitution transforms the differential equation to where we divided through with , which can be done so long as y is not zero.

Transformation to Laguerre polynomials
If the substitution is used, , and the differential operators become

The expression between the square brackets multiplying f(y) becomes the differential equation characterizing the generalized Laguerre equation
Laguerre polynomials

In mathematics, the Laguerre polynomials, named after Edmond Laguerre ,are the canonical solutions of Laguerre's equation:which is a second-order linear differential equation....
 (see also Kummer's equation
Confluent hypergeometric function

In mathematics, a confluent hypergeometric functions is a solution of a confluent hypergeometric equation, which is a degenerate form of a hypergeometric differential equation where two of the three regular singularities merge into an irregular singularity....
): with . Provided is a non-negative integral number, the solutions of this equations are generalized (associated) Laguerre polynomials
Laguerre polynomials

In mathematics, the Laguerre polynomials, named after Edmond Laguerre ,are the canonical solutions of Laguerre's equation:which is a second-order linear differential equation....
. From the conditions on k follows: (i) and (ii) n and l are either both odd or both even. This leads to the condition on l given above.

Recovery of the normalized radial wavefunction
Remembering that , we get the normalized radial solution

The normalization condition for the radial wavefunction is Substituting , gives and the equation becomes

By making use of the orthogonality properties
Laguerre polynomials

In mathematics, the Laguerre polynomials, named after Edmond Laguerre ,are the canonical solutions of Laguerre's equation:which is a second-order linear differential equation....
 of the generalized Laguerre polynomials, this equation simplifies to

Hence, the normalization constant can be expressed as

Other forms of the normalization constant can be derived by using properties of the gamma function
Gamma function

In mathematics, the Gamma function is an extension of the factorial function to real number and complex number numbers. For a complex number z with positive real part the Gamma function is defined by...
, while noting that n and l are both of the same parity. This means that n+l is always even, so that the gamma function becomes

where we used the definition of the double factorial
Factorial

In mathematics, the factorial of a negative and non-negative numbers integer n, denoted by n!, is the Product of all positive integers less than or equal to n....
. Hence, the normalization constant is also given by

Hydrogen-like atoms


A hydrogenic (hydrogen-like) atom is a two-particle system consisting of a nucleus and an electron. The two particles interact through the potential given by Coulomb's law
Coulomb's law

Coulomb's law, sometimes called the Coulomb law, is an equation describing the electrostatic force between electric charges. It was developed in the 1780s by French physicist Charles Augustin de Coulomb and was essential to the development of the classical electromagnetism....
:

where
  • e0 is the permittivity
    Permittivity

    Permittivity is a physical quantity that describes how an electric field affects, and is affected by a dielectric medium, and is determined by the ability of a material to polarization in response to the field, and thereby reduce the total electric field inside the material....
     of the vacuum,
  • Z is the atomic number
    Atomic number

    In chemistry and physics, the atomic number is the number of protons found in the atomic nucleus of an atom. It is conventionally represented by the symbol Z....
     (eZ is the charge of the nucleus),
  • e is the elementary charge
    Elementary charge

    The elementary charge, usually denoted e, is the electric charge carried by a single proton, or equivalently, the negative of the electric charge carried by a single electron....
     (charge of the electron),
  • r is the distance between the electron and the nucleus.


The mass m0, introduced above, is the reduced mass
Reduced mass

Reduced mass is the "effective" inertial mass appearing in the two-body problem of Newtonian mechanics. This is a quantity with the Units_of_measurement of mass, which allows the two-body problem to be solved as if it were a one-body problem....
 of the system. Because the electron mass is about 1836 smaller than the mass of the lightest nucleus (the proton), the value of m0 is very close to the mass of the electron me for all hydrogenic atoms. In the remaining of the article we make the approximation m0 = me. Since me will appear explicitly in the formulas it will be easy to correct for this approximation if necessary.

In order to simplify the Schrödinger equation, we introduce the following constants that define the atomic unit of energy and length, respectively, .

Substitute and into the radial Schrödinger equation given above. This gives an equation in which all natural constants are hidden,

Two classes of solutions of this equation exist: (i) W is negative, the corresponding eigenfunctions are square integrable and the values of W are quantized (discrete spectrum). (ii) W is non-negative. Every real non-negative value of W is physically allowed (continuous spectrum), the corresponding eigenfunctions are non-square integrable. In the remaining part of this article only class (i) solutions will be considered. The wavefunctions are known as bound state
Bound state

In physics, a bound state is a composite of two or more building blocks that behaves as a single object. In quantum mechanics , a bound state is a state in the Hilbert space that corresponds to two or more particles whose interaction energy is negative, and therefore these particles cannot be separated unless energy is spent....
s, in contrast to the class (ii) solutions that are known as scattering states.

For negative W the quantity is real and positive. The scaling of y, i.e., substitution of gives the Schrödinger equation:

For the inverse powers of x are negligible and a solution for large x is . The other solution, , is physically non-acceptable. For the inverse square power dominates and a solution for small x is xl+1. The other solution, x-l, is physically non-acceptable. Hence, to obtain a full range solution we substitute

The equation for fl(x) becomes,

Provided is a non-negative integer, say k, this equation has polynomial solutions written as

which are generalized Laguerre polynomials
Laguerre polynomials

In mathematics, the Laguerre polynomials, named after Edmond Laguerre ,are the canonical solutions of Laguerre's equation:which is a second-order linear differential equation....
 of order k. We will take the convention for generalized Laguerre polynomials of Abramowitz and Stegun. Note that the Laguerre polynomials given in many quantum mechanical textbooks, for instance the book of Messiah, are those of Abramowitz and Stegun multiplied by a factor (2l+1+k)! The definition given in this Wikipedia article
Laguerre polynomials

In mathematics, the Laguerre polynomials, named after Edmond Laguerre ,are the canonical solutions of Laguerre's equation:which is a second-order linear differential equation....
 coincides with the one of Abramowitz and Stegun.

The energy becomes The principal quantum number
Principal quantum number

In atomic physics, the principal quantum number symbolized as n is the firstof a set of quantum numbers of an atomic orbital. The quantum number n labels the energy levels of hydrogenic atoms....
 n satisfies , or . Since , the total radial wavefunction is

with normalization constant

which belongs to the energy

In the computation of the normalization constant use was made of the integral