Difference between revisions of "Atomic Units"
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The natural units for describing atomic systems are obtained by setting to unity | The natural units for describing atomic systems are obtained by setting to unity | ||
the three fundamental constants that appear in the hydrogen Hamiltonian, <math>\hbar=m=e=1</math>. One thus arrives at atomic units, such as | the three fundamental constants that appear in the hydrogen Hamiltonian, <math>\hbar=m=e=1</math>. One thus arrives at atomic units, such as | ||
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+ | <math>\def\AA\unicode{x212B}</math> | ||
* length: Bohr radius = <math>a_0=\frac{\hbar^2}{me^2}=\frac{1}{\alpha}\frac{\hbar}{mc}=0.53\ \AA</math> | * length: Bohr radius = <math>a_0=\frac{\hbar^2}{me^2}=\frac{1}{\alpha}\frac{\hbar}{mc}=0.53\ \AA</math> |
Revision as of 15:18, 18 October 2015
Atomic Units
The natural units for describing atomic systems are obtained by setting to unity the three fundamental constants that appear in the hydrogen Hamiltonian, . One thus arrives at atomic units, such as
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- length: Bohr radius =
- energy: 1 hartree =
- velocity:
- electric field:
- Note: This is the characteristic value for the orbit of hydrogen.
As we see above, we can express atomic units in terms of instead of by introducing a single dimensionless constant
The fine structure constant obtained its name from the appearance of in the ratio of fine structure splitting to the Rydberg; it is the only fundamental constant in atomic physics. As such, it should ultimately be predicted by a complete theory of physics. Whereas precision measurements of other constants are made in atomic physics for purely metrological purposes , , as a dimensionless constant, is not defined by metrology. Rather, characterizes the strength of the electromagnetic interaction, as the following example will illustrate. If energy uncertainties become become as large as , the concept of a particle breaks down. This upper bound on the energy uncertainty gives us, via the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle, a lower bound on the length scale within which an electron can be localized (before e.g. spontaneous pair production may occur) Even at this short distance of , the Coulumb interaction---while stronger than that in hydrogen at distance --- is only:
i.e. in relativistic units the strength of this "stronger" Coulomb interaction is . The fact that implies that the Coulomb interaction is weak.