Near-resonant atomic transitions

  • Thread starter Thread starter AzDubn
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Atomic
AzDubn
Messages
1
Reaction score
0
To excite an electron in the atom from lower state to higher you need an EM field of frequency that matches the energy difference between those levels. How does the near-resonance transition work then?
Thanks in advance.
 
Physics news on Phys.org
You need an EM field which matches the energy difference within the natural width of that transition (or within Doppler broadening, or whatever else smears out the energy levels).
 
If you use the drude model for an oscillator and include a damping term (modelled as a fictional force on the dynamical equation), you can allow for broadening and the peak of the resonant absorption frequency is not a sharp peak but rather a broad peak that is be centered around some maximum value. It is this broadening causes near-resonance transition.
 
From the BCS theory of superconductivity is well known that the superfluid density smoothly decreases with increasing temperature. Annihilated superfluid carriers become normal and lose their momenta on lattice atoms. So if we induce a persistent supercurrent in a ring below Tc and after that slowly increase the temperature, we must observe a decrease in the actual supercurrent, because the density of electron pairs and total supercurrent momentum decrease. However, this supercurrent...
Hi. I have got question as in title. How can idea of instantaneous dipole moment for atoms like, for example hydrogen be consistent with idea of orbitals? At my level of knowledge London dispersion forces are derived taking into account Bohr model of atom. But we know today that this model is not correct. If it would be correct I understand that at each time electron is at some point at radius at some angle and there is dipole moment at this time from nucleus to electron at orbit. But how...

Similar threads

Back
Top