Hooke's atom, also known as harmonium or hookium, refers to an artificial
helium
Helium (from el, ἥλιος, helios, lit=sun) is a chemical element with the symbol He and atomic number 2. It is a colorless, odorless, tasteless, non-toxic, inert, monatomic gas and the first in the noble gas group in the periodic table. ...
-like atom where the
Coulombic electron-nucleus interaction potential is
replaced by a
harmonic potential.
This system is of significance as it is, for certain values of the force constant defining the harmonic containment, an exactly solvable
ground-state
many-electron problem that explicitly includes
electron correlation. As such it can provide insight into quantum correlation (albeit in the presence of a non-physical nuclear potential) and can act as a test system for judging the accuracy of
approximate quantum chemical methods for solving the
Schrödinger equation
The Schrödinger equation is a linear partial differential equation that governs the wave function of a quantum-mechanical system. It is a key result in quantum mechanics, and its discovery was a significant landmark in the development of th ...
.
The name "Hooke's atom" arises because the harmonic potential used to describe the electron-nucleus interaction is a consequence of
Hooke's law.
Definition
Employing
atomic units, the
Hamiltonian defining the Hooke's atom is
:
As written, the first two terms are the kinetic energy operators of the two electrons, the third term is the harmonic electron-nucleus potential, and the final term the electron-electron interaction potential. The non-relativistic Hamiltonian of the helium atom differs only in the replacement:
:
Solution
The equation to be solved is the two electron Schrödinger equation:
:
For arbitrary values of the force constant, , the Schrödinger equation does not have an analytic solution. However, for a
countably infinite number of values, such as , simple closed form solutions can be derived.
Given the artificial nature of the system this restriction does not hinder the usefulness of the solution.
To solve, the system is first transformed from the Cartesian electronic coordinates, , to the center of mass coordinates, , defined as
:
Under this transformation, the Hamiltonian becomes separable – that is, the term coupling the two electrons is removed (and not replaced by some other form) allowing the general
separation of variables technique to be applied to further a solution for the wave function in the form
. The original Schrödinger equation is then replaced by:
:
:
The first equation for
is the Schrödinger equation for an isotropic
with ground-state energy
and (unnormalized) wave function
:
Asymptotically, the second equation again behaves as a harmonic oscillator of the form
and the rotationally invariant ground state can be expressed, in general, as
for some function
. It was long noted that is very well approximated by a linear function in .
Thirty years after the proposal of the model an exact solution was discovered for ,
and it was seen that . It was later shown that there are many values of which lead to an exact solution for the ground state,
as will be shown in the following.
Decomposing
and expressing the
Laplacian in
spherical coordinates,
:
one further decomposes the radial wave function as
which removes the first derivative to yield
:
The asymptotic behavior
encourages a solution of the form
:
The differential equation satisfied by
is
:
This equation lends itself to a solution by way of the
Frobenius method. That is,
is expressed as
:
for some
and
which satisfy:
:
:
:
:
:
:
The two solutions to the indicial equation are
and
of which the former is taken as it yields the regular (bounded,
normalizable) wave function. For a simple solution to exist, the infinite series is sought to terminate and it is here where particular values of are exploited for an exact closed-form solution. Terminating the polynomial at any particular order can be accomplished with different values of defining the Hamiltonian. As such there exists an infinite number of systems, differing only in the strength of the harmonic containment, with exact ground-state solutions. Most simply, to impose for , two conditions must be satisfied:
::
::
These directly force and respectively, and as a consequence of the three term recession, all higher coefficients also vanish. Solving for
and
yields
:
:
and the radial wave function
:
Transforming back to
:
the ground-state (with
and energy
) is finally
:
Combining, normalizing, and transforming back to the original coordinates yields the ground state wave function:
:
The corresponding ground-state total energy is then
.
Remarks
The exact ground state
electronic density of the Hooke atom for the special case
is
:
From this we see that the radial derivative of the density vanishes at the nucleus. This is in stark contrast to the real (non-relativistic) helium atom where the density displays a cusp at the nucleus as a result of the unbounded Coulomb potential.
See also
*
List of quantum-mechanical systems with analytical solutions
Much insight in quantum mechanics can be gained from understanding the closed-form solutions to the time-dependent non-relativistic Schrödinger equation. It takes the form
:
\hat \psi\left(\mathbf, t\right) =
\left - \frac \nabla^2 + V\left(\mat ...
References
Further reading
*
* {{cite journal , author = O’Neill, Darragh P. , author2=Gill, Peter M. W. , title = Wave functions and two-electron probability distributions of the Hooke's-law atom and helium , url=http://rsc.anu.edu.au/~pgill/papers/084Hookium.pdf , year = 2003 , journal =
Physical Review A , volume = 68 , issue = 2 , page = 022505 , doi = 10.1103/PhysRevA.68.022505, bibcode = 2003PhRvA..68b2505O
Quantum chemistry
Quantum models