Solid State Physics. Philip Hofmann
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Название: Solid State Physics

Автор: Philip Hofmann

Издательство: John Wiley & Sons Limited

Жанр: Физика

Серия:

isbn: 9783527837267

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СКАЧАТЬ could essentially be the sum of two Hamiltonians similar to the one in Eq. (2.4), one for each electron (but with the 1 slash upper R term appearing only once). If a Hamiltonian containing two electronic coordinates could be separated into a sum of two Hamiltonians that contain only one electronic coordinate each, the corresponding Schrödinger equation could be solved by a product of the two wave functions that are solutions to the two individual Hamiltonians. We could therefore start an attempt to solve Eq. (2.3) based on what we have already learned for the normal upper H 2 Superscript plus ion. However, we will start from an even simpler point of view: Without any interaction between the electrons, and for a large distance upper R, the electron near nucleus A will not feel the potential of nucleus B and vice versa. In this case, Eq. (2.3) would simply turn into the sum of the Hamiltonians for two hydrogen atoms and we could approximate the two‐electron wave function by phi left-parenthesis bold r 1 comma bold r 2 right-parenthesis equals phi Subscript normal upper A Baseline left-parenthesis bold r 1 right-parenthesis phi Subscript normal upper B Baseline left-parenthesis bold r 2 right-parenthesis, with phi Subscript normal upper A Baseline left-parenthesis bold r 1 right-parenthesis and phi Subscript normal upper B Baseline left-parenthesis bold r 1 right-parenthesis being the wave functions for atomic hydrogen.

      The plus sign in Eq. (2.9) returns a symmetric spatial wave function, which we can combine with an antisymmetric spin wave function with the total spin equal to zero (the so‐called singlet state); the minus in Eq. (2.10) results in an antisymmetric spatial wave function to be combined with a symmetric spin wave function with the total spin equal to 1 (the so‐called triplet state).

Schematic illustration of the energy changes ΔE↑↑ and ΔE↑↓ for the formation of a hydrogen molecule. The dashed lines represent the approximation for long distances.
and
for the formation of a hydrogen molecule. The dashed lines represent the approximation for long distances. The two insets show grayscale images of the corresponding electron probability density.

      (2.11)upper E equals StartFraction integral upper Psi Superscript asterisk Baseline left-parenthesis bold r 1 comma bold r 2 right-parenthesis upper H upper Psi left-parenthesis bold r 1 comma bold r 2 right-parenthesis normal d bold r 1 normal d bold r 2 Over integral upper Psi Superscript asterisk Baseline left-parenthesis bold r 1 comma bold r 2 right-parenthesis upper Psi left-parenthesis bold r 1 comma bold r 2 right-parenthesis normal d bold r 1 normal d bold r 2 EndFraction period

      According to the variational principle in quantum mechanics, the resulting energy will always be higher than the correct ground‐state energy, but it will approach it for a good choice of the trial wave functions.