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This book deals with the methods of X-ray production at a level which is accessible to advanced undergraduates and researchers who use X-rays. It also discusses the fundamentals of these physical properties from an experimental viewpoint which is not covered in more specialised texts. The book begins with a survey of work carried out before 1945. Continuous and characteristic spectra are discussed followed by a description of techniques used in their study. Further studies of production, absorption and scattering in atomic and nuclear processes are described, including a completely new chapter on X-ray production by protons, alpha-particles and ions. The concluding chapter surveys some more advanced fields of study. It will be very valuable to all research and industrial physicists working with X-rays who need to know about their fundamental properties in more detail. In this second edition SI units are used throughout and the material reflects the changes in the use of X-rays and the developments in the field.
This monograph presents a complete guide to the theory of modern spectroscopy of atoms. Atomic spectroscopy continues to be one of the most important subjects of contemporary physics. The book describes the contemporary state of the theory of many-electron atoms and ions, the peculiarities of their structure and spectra, the processes of their interaction with radiation, and some of the applications of atomic spectroscopy. It contains a large number of new results, which have been published mainly in Russian and are therefore almost unknown to western scientists. Primarily a reference for researchers and graduate students in atomic physics and physical chemistry, this work will also be of value to physicists and chemists in other areas who use spectroscopy in their work.
This book is an introduction to the physics of highly excited, easily perturbed or interacting atoms. The book begins with a brief introduction to the traditional view of electron shells and their properties, and then goes on to discuss Rydberg states, quantum defect theory, atomic f-values, centrifugal barrier effects, autoionisation, inner shell and double excitation spectra, K-matrix theory, atoms in high laser fields, statistical methods, quantum chaos, and atomic effects in solids. The emphasis is throughout on radial properties, orbital collapse, many body effects, the breakdown of the independent particle approach, the emergence of chaos, and the behaviour of atoms inside clusters and solids. A very full account of autoionisation includes not only the standard treatment for isolated resonances, but also several alternative approaches. The book discusses many experimental examples and has many diagrams and a comprehensive reference list.
This book describes the manifestations of chaos in atoms and molecules. The study of chaos is today one of the most active and prolific areas in atomic physics. This is the first attempt to provide a coherent introduction to this fascinating area. In line with its scope, the book is divided into two parts. The first part (chapters 1–5) deals with the theory and principles of classical chaos. The ideas developed here are then applied to actual atomic and molecular physics systems in the second part of the book (chapters 6–10) covering microwave driven surface state electrons, the hydrogen atom in a strong microwave field, the kicked hydrogen atom, chaotic scattering with CsI molecules and the helium atom. The book contains many diagrams and a detailed references list.
This graduate/research level text introduces the theory of multi-electron transitions in atomic, molecular and optical physics, emphasising the emerging topic of dynamic electron correlation. The book begins with an overview of simple binomial probabilities, classical scattering theory, quantum scattering and correlation, followed by the theory of single electron transition probabilities. Multiple electron transition probabilities are then treated in detail. Various approaches to multiple electron transitions are covered including the independent electron approximation, useful statistical methods and perturbation expansions treating correlation in both weak and strong limits. The important topic of the dynamics of electron correlation is a central theme in this book. The text contains a comprehensive summary of data for few and many-electron transitions in atoms and molecules, including transitions on different atomic centres, fast ion-atom and electron-atom interactions, and recent observations using synchrotron radiation. Emphasis is given to methods that may be used by non-specialists.
Cold and ultracold collisions occupy a strategic position at the intersection of several powerful themes of current research in chemical physics, in atomic, molecular and optical physics, and even in condensed matter. The nature of these collisions has important consequences for optical manipulation of inelastic and reactive processes, precision measurement of molecular and atomic properties, matter-wave coherences and quantum-statistical condensates of dilute, weakly interacting atoms. This crucial position explains the wide interest and explosive growth of the field since its inception in 1987. The author reviews elements of the quantum theory of scattering theory, collisions taking place in the presence of one or more light fields, and collisions in the dark, below the photon recoil limit imposed by the presence of any light field. Finally, it reviews the essential properties of these mesoscopic quantum systems and describes the key importance of the scattering length to condensate stability.
This book provides a comprehensive and up-to-date account of the field of low energy positrons and positronium within atomic and molecular physics. It begins with an introduction to the field, discussing the background to low energy positron beams, and then covers topics such as total scattering cross sections, elastic scattering, positronium formation, excitation and ionisation, annihilation and positronium interactions. Each chapter contains a blend of theory and experiment, giving a balanced treatment of all the topics. The book will be useful for graduate students and researchers in physics and chemistry. It is ideal for those wishing to gain rapid, in-depth knowledge of this unique branch of atomic physics.
Charged particle imaging has revolutionized experimental studies of photodissociation and bimolecular collisions. Written in a tutorial style by some of the key practitioners in the field, this book gives a comprehensive account of the technique and describes many of its applications. The book is split into two parts. Part I is intended as a series of tutorials. It explains the basic principles of the experiment and the numerical methods involved in interpreting experimental data. Part II describes a number of different applications. These chapters are more directly research oriented, the aim being to introduce the reader to the possibilities for future experiments. This comprehensive book will be of primary interest to researchers and graduate students working in chemical and molecular physics who require an overview of the subject as well as ideas for future experiments.
The conventional, single-reference, coupled-cluster method is very effective for electronic states dominated by a single determinant, such as most molecular ground states near their equilibrium geometry. Such states are predominantly closed-shell singlet states, and CC calculations on them produce pure singlet wave functions. But even these states become dominated by more than one determinant when one or more bonds are stretched close to breaking, so that single-reference CC based on RHF orbitals is then not usually appropriate for the calculation of entire potential-energy surfaces. While such problems can be partially treated by using UHF reference functions, which usually separate correctly, the UHF approach makes use of symmetry breaking and is poor in the spin-recoupling region.
Most excited, ionized and electron-attached states are open-shell states, and CC calculations on them using UHF or ROHF orbitals do not usually result in pure-spin wave functions. Furthermore, such states often involve large contributions from more than one determinant and thus do not respond well to conventional single-reference treatments.
One solution to these problems is to resort to multireference methods, such as those described in Chapters 8 and 14, but such treatments are still quite difficult to apply at a high enough level. An effective alternative in many cases is provided by the equation-of-motion coupled-cluster (EOM-CC) method (Emrich 1981, Sekino and Bartlett 1984, Comeau and Bartlett 1993, Stanton and Bartlett 1993a). A closely related approach is the coupled-cluster linear response (CCLR) method (Monkhorst 1977, Dalgaard and Monkhorst 1983, Koch and Jørgensen 1990).
The book focuses primarily on many-body (or better, many-electron) methods for electron correlation. These include Rayleigh–Schrödinger perturbation theory (RSPT), particularly in its diagrammatic representation (referred to as many-body perturbation theory, or MBPT), and coupled-cluster (CC) theory; their relationship to configuration interaction (CI) is included. Further extensions address properties other than the energy, and also excited states and multireference CC and MBPT methods.
The many-body algebraic and diagrammatic methods used in electronic structure theory have their origin in quantum field theory and in the study of nuclear matter and nuclear structure. The second-quantization formalism was first introduced in a treatment of quantized fields by Dirac (1927) and was extended to fermion systems by Jordan and Klein (1927) and by Jordan and Wigner (1928). This formalism is particularly useful in field theory, in scattering problems and in the study of infinite systems because it easily handles problems involving infinite, indefinite or variable numbers of particles. The diagrammatic approach was introduced into field theory by Feynman (1949a,b) and applied to many-body systems by Hugenholtz (1957) and by Goldstone (1957). Many-body perturbation theory and its linked-diagram formalism were first introduced by Brueckner and Levinson (1955) and by Brueckner (1955), and were formalized by Goldstone (1957). Other important contributions to the methodology, first in field theory and then in the theory of nuclear structure, are due to Dyson (1949a,b), Wick (1950), Hubbard (1957, 1958a,b) and Frantz and Mills (1960). Applications to the electronic structure of atoms and molecules began with the work of Kelly (1963, 1964a,b, 1968), and molecular applications using finite analytical basis sets appeared in the work of Bartlett and Silver (1974a, b).
This chapter addresses several more subtle but nevertheless important aspects of coupled-cluster MBPT theory.
Spin summations and computational considerations
The formalism described in the previous sections was presented in terms of spinorbitals, without regard to integration over spin coordinates. Even in the case of unrestricted Hartree–Fock (UHF) reference functions, in which the spatial orbitals for α and β spin are different, integration over spin is absolutely necessary to eliminate many integrals and to allow the introduction of constraints over the summation indices, achieving a computational effort of no more than three times that of comparable RHF calculations. Furthermore, all amplitudes in which the number of α and β spinorbitals is different for the hole and particle indices vanish, preserving the MS, but not the S, quantum number. In the restricted closed-shell Hartree–Fock (RHF) case, spin integration is used to combine contributions from α and β spinorbitals, deriving expressions in terms of spatial orbitals only and thus reducing the range of all indices by about a factor 2 (see Section 7.3). Restricted open-shell Hartree–Fock (ROHF) calculations are usually performed as UHF, despite double occupancy, because the most effective algorithms are still of the spin-integrated, spatial-orbital, form. The double occupancy cannot be exploited further without special effort.
The incorporation of spin integration can be done algebraically or, in some cases, diagrammatically. As an example of the diagrammatic treatment of spin summation in coupled-cluster calculations we shall consider the case of the CCD equation with an RHF reference function. The diagrammatic representation of this equation in a spinorbital basis was given in Fig. 9.2 in terms of antisymmetrized Goldstone diagrams.
“What are the electrons really doing in molecules?” This famous question was posed by R. A. Mulliken over a half-century ago. Accurate quantitative answers to this question would allow us, in principle, to know all there is to know about the properties and interactions of molecules. Achieving this goal, however, requires a very accurate solution of the quantum-mechanical equations, primarily the Schrödinger equation, a task that was not possible for most of the past half-century. This situation has now changed, primarily due to the development of numerically accurate many-body methods and the emergence of powerful supercomputers.
Today it is well known that the many-body instantaneous interactions of the electrons in molecules tend to keep electrons apart; this is manifested as a correlation of their motions. Hence a correct description of electron correlation has been the focal point of atomic, molecular and solid state theory for over 50 years. In the last two decades the most prominent methods for providing accurate quantum chemical wave functions and using them to describe molecular structure and spectra are many-body perturbation theory (MBPT) and its coupled-cluster (CC) generalizations. These approaches have become the methods of choice in quantum chemistry, owing to their accuracy and their correct scaling with the number of electrons, a property known as extensivity (or size-extensivity). This property distinguishes many-body methods from the configuration-interaction (CI) tools that have commonly been used for many years. However, maintaining extensivity – a critical rationale for all such methods – requires many-body methods that employ quite different mathematical tools for their development than those that have been customary in quantum chemistry.