Bill Foster said:
Homework Statement
Show that the expectation value of the Coulomb potential v(\vec{r_1},\vec{r_2})=\frac{e^2}{|\vec{r_1}-\vec{r_2}|}, between two electrons depends on the relative orientation of spin of the two electrons. Assume each electron is in the product state form \phi(\vec{r})\chi_{\frac{1}{2}m}(s).
Homework Equations
<A>_\phi = <\phi|A|\phi>
The Attempt at a Solution
No attempt as I don't even know where to start.
I'm guessing that somehow I have to write the Coulomb potential as an operator. And the two electrons as a state, and then use the equation for expectation value above.
(Note, the argument below is essentially the same as found in Sakurai's discussion of the Helium atom.)
Since the Coulomb potential commutes with the spin operators, we can almost neglect the spin computations in the matrix element. However, Fermi-Dirac statistic comes into play when we consider the wavefunctions.
Let the spatial wavefunctions be \phi_0(\vec{r}), where n refers to some quantum numbers. We'll take \phi_n(\vec{r}) to be the ground state.
We first consider the case when both electrons are in the ground state. Then by Fermi statistics, the spins must be opposite, so the spin state is the singlet. The 2-particle wavefunction is
\phi(\vec{r}_1,\vec{r}_2) = \phi_0(\vec{r}_1)\phi_0(\vec{r}_2) \chi_s(s_1,s_2).
There's no spin dependence of
\langle v(\vec{r_1},\vec{r_2}) \rangle
for this configuration.
Let's then consider the case where one electron is in the ground state and the other is in some excited state. The spins can either be opposite (singlet) or the same (triplet). For the singlet state the spatial part is symmetric:
\phi_+(\vec{r}_1,\vec{r}_2) =\frac{1}{\sqrt{2} }(\phi_0(\vec{r}_1)\phi_n(\vec{r}_2) + \phi_0(\vec{r}_2)\phi_n(\vec{r}_1) )\chi_s(s_1,s_2).
For the spin triplet, since the spins are symmetric, the spatial part must be antisymmetric:
\phi_-(\vec{r}_1,\vec{r}_2) = \frac{1}{\sqrt{2}}(\phi_0(\vec{r}_1)\phi_n(\vec{r}_2) -\phi_0(\vec{r}_2)\phi_n(\vec{r}_1) )\chi_t(s_1,s_2).
Now we can compute
\langle v(\vec{r_1},\vec{r_2}) \rangle_+ = \int d\vec{r}_1d\vec{r}_2 \phi_+^*(\vec{r}_1,\vec{r}_2) v(\vec{r_1},\vec{r_2}) \phi_+(\vec{r}_1,\vec{r}_2) = I + J
where
I = \int d\vec{r}_1d\vec{r}_2 v(\vec{r_1},\vec{r_2}) |\phi_0(\vec{r}_1)|^2|\phi_n(\vec{r}_2)|^2,
J = \int d\vec{r}_1d\vec{r}_2 v(\vec{r_1},\vec{r_2}) \phi_0^*(\vec{r}_1)\phi_0(\vec{r}_2) \phi_n^*(\vec{r}_2)\phi_n(\vec{r}_1).
However, for the triplet state, we find
\langle v(\vec{r_1},\vec{r_2}) \rangle_- = I - J.
So the spin dependence follows from spin statistics and not from any interaction term. Physically the reason is that when the electrons are in the triplet state, the spatial dependence is antisymmetric and the probability of finding the electrons close to one another is small. The electrostatic repulsion is minimized and the energy of the triplet state is lower than that of the singlet state. In the singlet state, the spatial function is symmetric and there is a high probability to find the electrons close to one another. Therefore the electrons see a higher electrostatic repulsion than in the triplet state.