: Ian P Grant
: Relativistic Quantum Theory of Atoms and Molecules Theory and Computation
: Springer-Verlag
: 9780387350691
: 1
: CHF 280.90
:
: Theoretische Physik
: English
: 800
: Wasserzeichen/DRM
: PC/MAC/eReader/Tablet
: PDF

This book is intended for physicists and chemists who need to understand the theory of atomic and molecular structure and processes, and who wish to apply the theory to practical problems. As far as practicable, the book provides a self-contained account of the theory of relativistic atomic and molecular structure, based on the accepted formalism of bound-state Quantum Electrodynamics. The author was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of London in 1992.



Professor Grant first became aware of the need to develop a relativistic theory of atomic and molecular structure some 50 years ago in connection with X-ray absorption by heavy metals. In a 1961 paper, he showed that the Dirac-Hartree-Fock equations for atoms could be written in a simple form which has been used in all subsequent atomic calculations. This early work was generalized to permit more accurate multi-configurational calculations in the next two decades, implemented in the widely used GRASP code for relativistic modeling of electronic wavefunctions, energy levels and radiative transition probabilities of spectral lines. The DARC code, an extension of GRASP which is designed to calculate cross sections for atom/ion collisions with low-energy electrons or photons, was developed mainly in the 1980s and is now becoming more relevant for applications involving target atoms of higher atomic number. The BERTHA code is the first relativistic molecular structure code designed to take advantage of the internal structure of Dirac four-component spinors; its speed and accuracy are now beginning to be appreciated and utilized effectively by quantum chemists. The book is designed for all those who would like to know more about the mathematics and physics of relativistic atomic and molecular theory and who wish to use the computational machinery now available to solve problems in atomic and molecular physics and their applications.

Profes or Grant was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of London in 1992.

<
Preface7
Contents10
Part I Relativity in atomic and molecular physics23
1 Relativity in atomic and molecular physics24
1.1 Elementary ideas24
1.2 The one-electron atom28
1.3 Many-electron atoms40
1.4 Applications to atomic physics61
1.5 Relativistic molecular structure66
References75
Part II Foundations81
2 Relativistic wave equations for free particles82
2.1 The special theory of relativity82
2.2 The Lorentz group85
2.3 The Poincar ´ e group92
2.4 The Klein-Gordon equation100
2.5 The Dirac equation105
2.6 Maxwell’s equations115
2.7 Symmetries and local conservation laws122
2.8 Global conservation laws126
2.9 Green’s functions127
References138
3 The Dirac Equation140
3.1 Free particles140
3.2 Spherical symmetry151
3.3 Hydrogenic atoms162
3.4 Scattering by a centre of force171
3.5 Relativistic quantum defect theory180
3.6 Green’s functions185
3.7 The nonrelativistic limit: the Pauli approximation192
3.8 Other aspects of Dirac theory197
References197
4 Quantum electrodynamics199
4.1 Second quantization199
4.2 Quantization of the electron-positron .eld207
4.3 Quantization of the Maxwell .eld214
4.4 Interaction of photons and electrons218
4.5 Wick’s theorems224
4.6 Propagators226
4.7 The S-matrix235
4.8 Bound states236
4.9 E.ective interactions240
4.10 Off-shell potentials246
4.11 Many-body perturbation theory250
4.12 MBPT for atoms and molecules254
4.13 Relativistic approaches to atomic and molecular structure256
4.14 A strategy for atomic and molecular calculations261
4.15 Density functional theories263
References271
Part III Computational atomic and molecular structure275
5 Analysis and approximation of Dirac Hamiltonians276
5.1 Self-adjointness of free particle Hamiltonians277
5.2 Self-adjointness of Hamiltonians with a local potential279
5.3 The radial Dirac di.erential operator282
5.4 The radial Dirac equation for atoms287
5.5 Variational methods in quantum mechanics291
5.6 The Rayleigh-Ritz method in relativistic quantum mechanics302
5.7 Spinor basis sets307
5.8 L-spinors310
5.9 S-spinors320
5.10 G-spinors322
5.11 Finite di.erence methods324
5.12 Finite element methods332
References339
6 Complex atoms342
6.1 Dirac-Hartree-Fock theory342
6.2 One-electron matrix elements of tensor operators344
6.3 Angular reduction of the Dirac Hamiltonian for a central potential348
6.4 Matrix elements of 2-body operators350
6.5 Interaction strengths for the magnetic interactions357
6.6 Closed shells and con.guration averages363
6.7 DHF integro-di.erential equations369
6.8 Con.gurations with incomplete subshells378
6.9 Atoms with complex con.gurations393
6.10 CI and MCDHF problems with large CSF sets401
References408
7 Computation of atomic structures410
7.1 Atomic structure calculations with GRASP410
7.2 GRASP modules411
7.3 MCDHF integro-di.erential equations415
7.4 Solving the integro-di.erential equations418
7.5 Starting the calculation420
7.6 An EAL calculation424
7.7 Diagonal and o.-diagonal energy parameters425
7.8 Koopmans’ theorem and Brillouin’s theorem428
7.9 Control of MCSCF iterations433
7.10 Corrections to the Coulomb interaction: Breit and other approximations435
7.11 QED corrections436
7.12 Towards higher quality atomic models440
7.13 X-ray transition energies445
References448
8 Computation of atomic properties450
8.1 Relativistic radiative transition theory450
8.2 Emission and absorption by one-electron atoms454
8.3 Radiative transitions in many-electron atoms460
8.4 Orbital relaxation461
8.5 Application to atomic transition calculations465
8.6 Relativistic atomic photo-ionization theory469
8.7 Hyper.ne interactions476
8.8 Isotope shifts481
References484
9 Continuum processes in many-electron atoms487
9.1 Relativistic elastic electron-atom scattering487
9.2 Electron-atom scattering: the close-coupling method493
9.3 The relativistic R-matrix method496
9.4 The Buttle correction508
9.5 R-matrix theory of photo-ionization509