Fine Structure and Lamb Shift

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Introduction

Immediately adjacent to Michelson and Morley's announcement of their failure to find the ether in an 1887 issue of the Philosophical Journal is a paper by the same authors reporting that the H line of hydrogen is actually a doublet, with a separation of 0.33 cm. In 1915 Bohr suggested that this "fine structure" of hydrogen is a relativistic effect arising from the variation of mass with velocity. Sommerfeld, in 1916, solved the relativistic Kepler problem and using the old quantum theory, as it was later christened, accounted precisely for the splitting.

Sommerfeld's theory gave the lie to Einstein's dictum "The Good Lord is subtle but not malicious", for it gave the right results for the wrong reason: his theory made no provision for electron spin, an essential feature of fine structure. Today, all that is left from Sommerfeld's theory is the fine structure constant . The theory for the fine structure in hydrogen was provided by Dirac whose relativistic electron theory (1926) was applied to hydrogen by Darwin and Gordon in 1928. They found the following expression for the energy of an electron bound to a proton of infinite mass:

where is the principal quantum number, , and . The Dirac equation is not nearly as illuminating as the Pauli equation, which is the approximation to the Dirac equation to the lowest order in v/c.

The first term is the electron's rest energy; the following two terms are the non relativistic Hamiltonian, and the last term, the fine structure interaction, is given by

The relativistic contributions can be described as the kinetic, spin-orbit, and Darwin terms, , , and , respectively. Each has a straightforward physical interpretation.

Kinetic contribution

Relativistically, the total electron energy is E = . The kinetic energy is

Thus

Spin-Orbit Interaction

According to the Dirac theory the electron has intrinsic angular momentum and a magnetic moment . The electron g-factor, and the Bohr magneton . As the electron moves through the electric field of the proton it "sees" a motional magnetic field

where . However, there is another contribution to the effective magnetic field arising from the Thomas precession. The relativistic transformation of a vector between two moving co- ordinate systems which are moving with different velocities involve not only a dilation, but also a rotation (cf Jackson, Classical Electrodynamics). The rate of rotation, the Thomas precession, is <equation id="EQ_soitwo" noautocaption> (%i) </equation> Note that the precession vanishes for co-linear acceleration. However, for a vector fixed in a co-ordinate system moving around a circle, as in the case of the spin vector of the electron as it circles the proton, Thomas precession occurs. From the point of view of an observer fixed to the nucleus, the precession of the electron is identical to the effect of a magnetic field.

Substituting , and into <xr id="EQ_soitwo"/> gives

Hence the total effective magnetic field is

This gives rise to a total spin-orbit interaction

The Darwin Term

Electrons exhibit "Zitterbewegung", fluctuations in position on the order of the Compton wavelength, . As a result, the effective Coulombic potential is not , but some suitable average , where the average is over the characteristic distance . To evaluate this, expand about in terms of a displacement ,

Assume that the fluctuations are isotropic. Then the time average of is

The precise expression for the Darwin term is

The coefficient of the Darwin term is 1/8, rather than 1/6. Recall that , so that the Darwin term is nonzero only for states, where . That is, the Zitterbewegung effectively cuts off the cusp of the potential, thereby reducing the binding energy for -electrons.

Evaluation of the fine structure interaction

Fine structure-fs levels.png

Fine structure of levels in hydrogen. The degeneracy between the and levels, which looks accidental in non-relativistic quantum mechanics, is really deeply rooted in the relativistic nature of the system. The degeneracy is ultimatly broken in QED by the Lamb Shift.

The spin orbit-interaction is not diagonal in or due to the term . However, it is diagonal in . is likewise diagonal in . Hence, finding the energy level structure due to the fine structure interaction involves evaluating . Note that vanishes in an state, and that vanishes in all states but an state. Summing all the contributions, one finally obtains

Note that states of a given and are degenerate. This degeneracy is a crucial feature of the Dirac theory.

The Lamb Shift

According to the Dirac theory, states of the hydrogen atom with the same values of and are degenerate. Hence, in a given term, (), (), (), etc. form degenerate doublets. However, this is not exactly the case. Because of vacuum interactions, not taken into account in the Dirac theory, the degeneracy is broken. The largest effect is in the state. The energy splitting between the and states is called the Lamb Shift.

This splitting is caused by interactions with the vacuum. A full treatment in QED (see books by Cohen-Tannoudji et al.) uses the operator for the interaction between the electromagnetic field and the atoms. In the representation, the Hamiltonian is . The operator of the vector potential A is the operator of the quantized radiation field. Carrying out second order perturbation theory (to order ) including summation over all modes gives the Lamb shift.

A simple physical model due to Welton and Weisskopf demonstrate its origin. In the following derivation, note the analogy between the vacuum fluctuations inducing the Lamb Shift and the Zitterbewegung responsible for the Darwin term treated in the previous section. Because of zero point fluctuation in the vacuum, empty space is not truly empty. The electromagnetic modes of free space behave like harmonic oscillators, each with zero-point energy . The density of modes per unit frequency interval and per volume is given by the well known expression

Consequently, the zero-point energy density is

With this energy we can associate a spectral density of radiation

The bar denotes a time average and and are the field amplitudes. Hence,

For the moment we shall treat the electron as if it were free. Its motion is given by

(%i)

The effect of the fluctuation is to cause a change in the average potential

can be found by a Taylor's expansion:

When we average this in time, the second term vanishes because s averages to zero. For the same reason, in the final term, only contributions with remain. We have, taking the average,

Since we obtain finally

Since , we obtain the following expression for the change in energy <equation id="EQ_lambeleven" noautocaption> (%i)

</equation> The matrix element gives contributions only for states, where its value is <equation id="EQ_lambtwelve" noautocaption> (%i)

</equation> Combining <xr id="EQ_lambsix"/> and <xr id="EQ_lambtwelve"/> into <xr id="EQ_lambeleven"/> yields

Integrating over some yet to be specified frequency limits, we obtain

At this point, atomic units come in handy. Converting by the usual prescription, we obtain

The question remaining is how to choose the cut-off frequencies for the integration. It is reasonable that is approximately the frequency of an orbiting electron, in atomic units. At lower energies, the electron could not respond. For the upper limit, a plausible guess is the rest energy of the electron, . Hence, . For the state, this gives

atomic~units MHz

The actual value is 1,058 MHz. Measurements of the Lamb shift [1] [2] [3] have occupied the forefront of hydrogen spectroscopy from Lamb's original 1947 discovery, using microwave techniques, of a shift of "about 1000 Mc/sec" to more recent results at the level of precision obtained in the optical domain by two-photon spectroscopy.

Discussion on the sign of the Lamb shift:

The physical picture due to Welton and Weisskopf implies that the Coulomb field is "smeared out" for s electrons and results in a weaker binding energy. This is correct. However, there is a second contribution, the vacuum polarization which can be visualized by assuming that between charged particles virtual electrons and positrons pairs are created which shield some of the Coulomb field. One would expect that this shielding effect lowers the biding energy. However, what we measure as charge of the proton and electron are the shielded values of the charge. An s electron interacting with the proton penetrates the shield and sees a charge which is higher, closer to the naked charge. Therefore, the vacuum polarization increases the binding energy of s electrons. For the state this amounts to 27 MHz, or 3% of the total Lamb shift.

References

  • Lamb1947: Willis E. Lamb and Robert C. Retherford. Fine structure of the hydrogen atom by a microwave method. Phys. Rev., 72(3):241–243, Aug 1947.
  • Schwob1999: C. Schwob, L. Jozefowski, B. de Beauvoir, L. Hilico, F. Nez, L. Julien, F. Biraben, O. Acef, J.-J. Zondy, and A. Clairon. Optical frequency measurement of the transitions in hydrogen and deuterium: Rydberg constant and Lamb shift determinations. Phys. Rev. Lett., 82(25):4960–4963, Jun 1999.
  • Weitz1994: M. Weitz, A. Huber, F. Schmidt-Kaler, D. Leibfried, and T. W. Hänsch. Precision measurement of the hydrogen and deuterium 1 s ground state Lamb shift. Phys. Rev. Lett., 72(3):328–331, Jan 1994.


Notes

  1. Willis E. Lamb and Robert C. Retherford. Fine structure of the hydrogen atom by a microwave method. Phys. Rev., 72(3):241–243, Aug 1947.
  2. C. Schwob, L. Jozefowski, B. de Beauvoir, L. Hilico, F. Nez, L. Julien, F. Biraben, O. Acef, J.-J. Zondy, and A. Clairon. Optical frequency measurement of the 2s−12d transitions in hydrogen and deuterium: Rydberg constant and Lamb shift determinations. Phys. Rev. Lett., 82(25):4960–4963, Jun 1999.
  3. M. Weitz, A. Huber, F. Schmidt-Kaler, D. Leibfried, and T. W. Hänsch. Precision measurement of the hydrogen and deuterium 1 s ground state Lamb shift. Phys. Rev. Lett., 72(3):328–331, Jan 1994. \cite{Lamb1947, Weitz1994, Schwob1999}