1 / 18

Lectures 7-8: Fine and hyperfine structure of hydrogen

Lectures 7-8: Fine and hyperfine structure of hydrogen. Fine structure Spin-orbit interaction. Relativistic kinetic energy correction Hyperfine structure The Lamb shift. Nuclear moments. Spin-orbit coupling in H-atom. Fine structure of H-atom is due to spin-orbit interaction:

zandra
Download Presentation

Lectures 7-8: Fine and hyperfine structure of hydrogen

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Lectures 7-8: Fine and hyperfine structure of hydrogen • Fine structure • Spin-orbit interaction. • Relativistic kinetic energy correction • Hyperfine structure • The Lamb shift. • Nuclear moments. PY3P05

  2. Spin-orbit coupling in H-atom • Fine structure of H-atom is due to spin-orbit interaction: • If L is parallel to S => J is a maximum => high energy configuration. • Angular momenta are described in terms of quantum numbers, s, l and j: is a max +Ze -e is a min +Ze -e PY3P05

  3. Spin-orbit effects in H fine structure • For practical purposes, convenient to express spin-orbit coupling as where is the spin-orbit coupling constant. Therefore, for the 2p electron: j = 3/2 +1/2a Angular momenta aligned E 2p1 j = 1/2 -a Angular momenta opposite PY3P05

  4. Spin-orbit coupling in H-atom • The spin-orbit coupling constant is directly measurable from the doublet structure of spectra. • If we use the radius rnof the nthBohr radius as a rough approximation for r (from Lectures 1-2): • Spin-orbit coupling increases sharply with Z. Difficult for observed for H-atom, as Z = 1: 0.14 Å (H), 0.08 Å (H), 0.07 Å (H). • Evaluating the quantum mechanical form, • Therefore, using this and s = 1/2: PY3P05

  5. Term Symbols • Convenient to introduce shorthand notation to label energy levels that occurs in the LS coupling regime. • Each level is labeled by L, S and J: 2S+1LJ • L = 0 => S • L = 1 => P • L = 2 =>D • L = 3 =>F • If S = 1/2, L =1 => J = 3/2 or 1/2. This gives rise to two energy levels or terms, 2P3/2 and 2P1/2 • 2S + 1 is the multiplicity. Indicates the degeneracy of the level due to spin. • If S = 0 => multiplicity is 1: singlet term. • If S = 1/2 => multiplicity is 2: doublet term. • If S = 1 => multiplicity is 3: triplet term. • Most useful when dealing with multi-electron atoms. PY3P05

  6. Term diagram for H fine structure • The energy level diagram can also be drawn as a term diagram. • Each term is evaluated using: 2S+1LJ • For H, the levels of the 2P term arising from spin-orbit coupling are given below: +1/2a Angular momenta aligned 2P3/2 E 2p1 (2P) -a Angular momenta opposite 2P1/2 PY3P05

  7. Hydrogen fine structure • Spectral lines of H found to be composed of closely spaced doublets. Splitting is due to interactions between electron spin S and the orbital angular momentum L => spin-orbit coupling. • H line is single line according to the Bohr or Schrödinger theory. Occurs at 656.47 nm for H and 656.29 nm for D (isotope shift, ~0.2 nm). • Spin-orbit coupling produces fine-structure splitting of ~0.016 nm. Corresponds to an internal magnetic field on the electron of about 0.4 Tesla. H PY3P05

  8. Relativistic kinetic energy correction • According to special relativity, the kinetic energy of an electron of mass m and velocity v is: • The first term is the standard non-relativistic expression for kinetic energy. The second term is the lowest-order relativistic correction to this energy. • Using perturbation theory, it can be show that • Produces an energy shift comparable to spin-orbit effect. • A complete relativistic treatment of the electron involves the solving the Dirac equation. PY3P05

  9. Total fine structure correction • For H-atom, the spin-orbit and relativistic corrections are comparable in magnitude, but much smaller than the gross structure. Enlj = En + EFS • Gross structure determined by Enfrom Schrödinger equation. The fine structure is determined by • As En = -Z2E0/n2, where E0 = 1/22mc2, we can write • Gives the energy of the gross and fine structure of the hydrogen atom. PY3P05

  10. Fine structure of hydrogen • Energy correction only depends on j, which is of the order of 2 ~ 10-4 times smaller that the principle energy splitting. • All levels are shifted down from the Bohr energies. • For every n>1and l, there are two states corresponding to j = l ± 1/2. • States with same n and j but different l, have the same energies (does not hold when Lamb shift is included). i.e., are degenerate. • Using incorrect assumptions, this fine structure was derived by Sommerfeld by modifying Bohr theory => right results, but wrong physics! PY3P05

  11. Hyperfine structure: Lamb shift • Spectral lines give information on nucleus. Main effects are isotope shift and hyperfine structure. • According to Schrödinger and Dirac theory, states with same n and j but different l are degenerate. However, Lamb and Retherford showed in 1947 that 22S1/2 (n = 2, l = 0, j = 1/2) and 22P1/2 (n = 2, l = 1, j = 1/2) of H-atom are not degenerate. • Experiment proved that even states with the same total angular momentum J are energetically different. PY3P05

  12. Hyperfine structure: Lamb shift • Excite H-atoms to 22S1/2 metastable state by e- bombardment. Forbidden to spontaneuosly decay to 12S1/2 optically. • Cause transitions to 22P1/2state using tunable microwaves. Transitions only occur when microwaves tuned to transition frequency. These atoms then decay emitting Ly line. • Measure number of atoms in 22S1/2 state from H-atom collisions with tungsten (W) target. When excitation to 22P1/2, current drops. • Excited H atoms (22S1/2 metastable state) cause secondary electron emission and current from the target. Dexcited H atoms (12S1/2 ground state) do not. PY3P05

  13. Hyperfine structure: Lamb shift • According to Dirac and Schrödinger theory, states with the same n and j quantum numbers but different l quantum numbers ought to be degenerate. Lamb and Retherford showed that 2 S1/2 (n=2, l=0, j=1/2) and 2P1/2 (n=2, l=1, j=1/2) states of hydrogen atom were not degenerate, but that the S state had slightly higher energy by E/h = 1057.864 MHz. • Effect is explained by the theory of quantum electrodynamics, in which the electromagnetic interaction itself is quantized. • For further info, see http://www.pha.jhu.edu/~rt19/hydro/node8.html PY3P05

  14. Hyperfine structure: Nuclear moments • Hyperfine structure results from magnetic interaction between the electron’s total angular momentum (J) and the nuclear spin (I). • Angular momentum of electron creates a magnetic field at the nucleus which is proportional to J. • Interaction energy is therefore • Magnitude is very small as nuclear dipole is ~2000 smaller than electron (~1/m). • Hyperfine splitting is about three orders of magnitude smaller than splitting due to fine structure. PY3P05

  15. Hyperfine structure: Nuclear moments • Like electron, the proton has a spin angular momentum and an associated intrinsic dipole moment • The proton dipole moment is weaker than the electron dipole moment by M/m ~ 2000and hence the effect is small. • Resulting energy correction can be shown to be: • Total angular momentum including nuclear spin, orbital angular momentum and electron spin is where • The quantum number f has possible values f = j + 1/2, j - 1/2 since the proton has spin 1/2,. • Hence every energy level associated with a particular set of quantum numbers n, l, and j will be split into two levels of slightly different energy, depending on the relative orientation of the proton magnetic dipole with the electron state. PY3P05

  16. Hyperfine structure: Nuclear moments • The energy splitting of the hyperfine interaction is given by where a is the hyperfine structure constant. • E.g., consider the ground state of H-atom. Nucleus consists of a single proton, so I = 1/2. The hydrogen ground state is the 1s 2S1/2 term, which has J = 1/2. Spin of the electron can be parallel (F = 1) or antiparallel (F = 0). Transitions between these levels occur at 21 cm (1420 MHz). • For ground state of the hydrogen atom (n=1), the energy separation between the states of F = 1 and F = 0 is 5.9 x 10-6 eV. F = 1 F = 0 21 cm radio map of the Milky Way PY3P05

  17. Selection rules • Selection rules determine the allowed transitions between terms. n = any integer l = ±1 j = 0, ±1 f = 0, ±1 PY3P05

  18. Summary of Atomic Energy Scales • Gross structure: • Covers largest interactions within the atom: • Kinetic energy of electrons in their orbits. • Attractive electrostatic potential between positive nucleus and negative electrons • Repulsive electrostatic interaction between electrons in a multi-electron atom. • Size of these interactions gives energies in the 1-10 eV range and upwards. • Determine whether a photon is IR, visible, UV or X-ray. • Fine structure: • Spectral lines often come as multiplets. E.g., H line. => smaller interactions within atom, called spin-orbit interaction. • Electrons in orbit about nucleus give rise to magnetic moment of magnitude B, which electron spin interacts with. Produces small shift in energy. • Hyperfine structure: • Fine-structure lines are split into more multiplets. • Caused by interactions between electron spin and nucleus spin. • Nucleus produces a magnetic moment of magnitude ~B/2000 due to nuclear spin. • E.g., 21-cm line in radio astronomy. PY3P05

More Related