haruspex said:
Thus there is a bias towards greater r. Your interpretations (which I support) maximise wrt r and θ independently, so no initial integration step.
Yes, there is a bias towards greater r and we agree that one needs to maximize independently. We also agree that the probability of finding the electron within element dV is given by dP = const. R
2(r) (Y
20)
2(dr)(r sinθ dθ)(r dφ)
In the expression above, I separated the volume element dV into the three "axes" as suggested by
haruspex. At this point,
haruspex suggests (I think) that one should proceed by maximizing the radial part R
2(r) separately from the angular part (Y
20)
2 to find values for r and θ. This is maximizing the probability distribution, not the probability and I agree that, if the problem asked to maximize the probability, that's what one should do.
The problem is asking "Find r and θ for which the probability of finding the electron is maximum", which I find ambiguously incomplete, like asking "find the work done on the charge when moved from point A to point B in an electric field." Done by what force? The agent who moves the charge or the electric force? Here, I find myself asking what probability? Let me explain how I see it. Starting with what we all agree on, dP = const. R
2(r) (Y
20)
2(dr)(r sinθ dθ)(r dφ), the probability that the electron is found within area at element dA = (dr)(r sinθ dθ) and
any azimuthal angle φ is obtained by integrating over the azimuthal angle to get
dP = const1 R
2(r) (Y
20)
2r (dr)(r sinθ dθ)
At this point, if we wish to maximize independently, we can find the probability of finding the electron at any angle θ and any angle φ by integrating over θ to get
dP = const2 R
2(r) r
2 (dr)
This can be interpreted two ways
1. Leave it as is so that dP = const2 {r
2 R
2(r)} dr which is the probability of finding the electron at any angle φ and θ and radially between r and r + dr. What gets maximized is what's between angular brackets.
2. "Borrow" 4π from the constant and write this as dP = const3 {R
2(r)} A dr which is the probability of finding the electron anywhere within a spherical shell of area A = 4πr
2 and thickness dr. As before, what gets maximized is what's between angular brackets and this maximization gives the same answer as maximizing the radial probability distribution.
What if we integrated the radial part first? Then, we would get
dP = const4 (Y
20)
2(sinθ dθ)
If we want to maximize the probability of finding the electron between θ and θ+dθ, we maximize sinθ (Y
20)
2.
If we want to maximize the probability of finding the electron between cosθ and cos(θ+dθ), we maximize (Y
20)
2 because sinθ dθ = d(cosθ) (never mind the negative sign; it's there to show that cosθ decreases with increasing θ).
This is how I see it.