We examine the interactions of radiation with a hydrogen-like atom as a simple example that displays many of the typical characteristics of how atoms and molecules in general interact with photons. We will examine the spectral line processes of absorption, stimulated emission (emission caused by passing radiation), spontaneous emission (radiation without any external stimulus), and the continuum process of photoelectric absorption.
In principle these processes should be described using quantum electrodynamics. However, this course is not at that level. We will describe the radiation field semi-classically (so we will have to study spontaneous emission using a statistical argument of Einstein), but use a quantum mechanical description of the atoms.
In a comprehensive treatment of electromagnetic theory using Maxwell's
equations, it is found that the electric and magnetic fields may be
derived from vector and scalar potentials and
:
For later reference, the energy flow per unit area through a surface
normal to a wave is given by the Poynting vector,
. Averaged over a period of the wave, this defines the
intensity of the radiation
It may be shown (but we won't do this) in our semi-classical
treatment that the Schroedinger equation for a spinless charged
particle in an electromagnetic field is given approximately by
As in the treatment of time-dependent perturbation from last week,
take the perturbation to be the time-dependent term
We have seen in the discussion of time-dependent perturbation theory
that we got a constant transition probability per unit time only by
assuming that a range of final state energies larger than the width of
the function was available. We will consider this case
later (as photoionization). Here we want to look at transitions
between two isolated bound states. In this case we can get the same
simple behaviour as before by assuming that the radiation field is not
monochromatic, but covers a significant range of frequencies with
roughly constant intensity. Thus here we will take
to
describe the energy per second and per unit angular frequency passing
normally through a unit area.
If this radiation were emitted coherently by some single radiation
source, we would have interference effects between interactions at
different frequencies, and we would have to sum the 's
before computing the total transition probability. However, here we
assume the much more typical situation of radiation emitted in little
packets by a large number of incoherent radiators (individual atoms),
each with a different phase
. The radiation will
therefore add incoherently; different frequencies will not interfere,
and we may calculate the transition probability by integrating
over the range of wavelength of the incoming
radiation.
Now consider the absorption term:
The second term in the equation for describes the
probability of a photon being emitted by the atom as a result of the
arriving radiation. With the same reasoning as above, we find
We now look at how to compute the matrix element which
appears in the expressions for transition rates. Consider the
exponential term
If the matrix element is non-zero in this approximation, the
transition is allowed. If
in the dipole
approximation, it may still be non-zero by using one of the further
terms in the expansion of the exponential, but because of the
smallness of
, it will be much weaker than an allowed
transition. Such a transition is called forbidden. If
vanishes exactly, the transition is strictly forbidden (although
it may still occur via two-photon processes or other more devious
routes).
The transition probability is now given by
We may explicitly evaluate the transition rates for radiative transitions between the levels of a hydrogenic atom. I will show one straightforward way to do this which will yield most of the selection rules obeyed by dipole transitions. Another more elegant method is discussed by B & J.
To get transition rates, we must evaluate the dipole matrix elements
We immediately see that the integral over vanishes unless
or
is 0. This is also the case for
;
is non-zero if
. Thus dipole transitions are only
possible between states with
.
The integral yields further restrictions. We may evaluate
this using the recursion relation
The electric dipole operator does not depend on spin, and since different spin states are orthogonal, the transition probability is non-zero only if the spin component along the direction of quantization does not change.
If an atom is in an excited state , the total probability per
second that it will change to some other state
is
. This will normally be a sum over spontaneous transitions
(although if the atom is in an intense radiation field, it may be over
spontaneous and stimulated emissions and absorptions; in this case
there will also be terms in the sum bringing atoms into state
from other states). If there are
atoms in an ensemble in
state
at time
, the number of transitions
out of
per second will be
, and if no transitions
into
are occurring, we will have
Finally, we look at another process of wide importance, the absorption
of radiation energetic enough to photoionize an atom, known as the
photoelectric effect. Here we consider only the simplest case of
photons carrying much more energy than the ionization energy of the
atom,
(but still satisfying
).
To study this situation we go back to the derivation of the transition
rate for absorption of radiation, but instead of considering an
incoming radiation beam spread in frequency, with intensity per unit
angular frequency , we now take
to specify the total
intensity (energy per unit time and area) of angular frequency
. In order to get our usual simple behaviour of
, we
notice that after absorption of a photoionizing photon, a large number
of neighboring final atomic states will be available, since the
removed electron will not be in a bound state, but in a continuum with
states per unit angular frequency and per steradian of
solid angle. Thus we will sum the
transition probabilities
over final electron states rather
than over neighboring frequencies
. We find
Now for the initial state of the atom, we take a hydrogenic ground
state
, and for
the final state we take a plane wave unperturbed by the atomic
potential (this is why we need to assume a photon energy much larger
than the ionization energy),
, normalized to an
arbitrary volume
. The outgoing electron has wave number
and energy
. The density of
final states (per unit angular frequency and per steradian) is given
(a problem for you) by
Now from our assumption that the binding energy is negligible, we have
This equation, like others derived for hydrogen, may be used to obtain a first estimate of the situation for other ions. Thus, one may use this equation to estimate the cross section for ejection of K-shell electrons from a heavy ion.
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