- Spin-orbit interaction
In
quantum physics , the spin-orbit interaction (also called "spin-orbit effect" or "spin-orbit coupling") is any interaction of a particle's spin with its motion. The first and best known example of this is that spin-orbit interaction causes shifts in anelectron 's atomic energy levels (detectable as a splitting ofspectral line s), due to electromagnetic interaction between the electron's spin and the nucleus's electric field, through which it moves. A similar effect, due to the relationship betweenangular momentum and thestrong nuclear force , occurs forproton s andneutron s moving inside the nucleus, leading to a shift in their energy levels in the nucleusshell model . In the field ofspintronics , spin-orbit effects for electrons insemiconductor s and other materials are explored and put to useful work.pin-orbit interaction in atomic energy levels
In this section, we will present a relatively simple and quantitative description of the spin-orbit interaction for an electron bound to an atom, using some semiclassical
electrodynamics andnon-relativistic quantum mechanics , up to first order in perturbation theory. This gives results that agree well, but not perfectly, with observations. A more rigorous derivation of the same result would start with theDirac equation , and achieving a more precise result would involve calculating small corrections fromquantum electrodynamics , both beyond the scope of this article.Energy of a magnetic moment
The energy of a magnetic moment in a magnetic field is given by:
:
where μ is the
magnetic moment of the particle and B is themagnetic field it experiences.Magnetic field
We shall deal with the
magnetic field first. Although in the rest frame of the nucleus, there is no magnetic field, there "is" one in the rest frame of the electron. Ignoring for now that this frame is notinertial , we end up with the equation:
where v is the velocity of the electron and E the electric field it travels through. Now we know that E is radial so we can rewrite .Also we know that the momentum of the electron . Substituting this in and changing the order of the cross product gives:
:
Next, we express the electric field as the gradient of the
electric potential . Here we make thecentral field approximation , that is, that the electrostatic potential is spherically symmetric, so is only a function of radius. This approximation is exact for hydrogen, and indeed hydrogen-like systems. Now we can say:
where is the
potential energy of the electron in the central field, and "e" is theelementary charge . Now we remember from classical mechanics that theangular momentum of a particle . Putting it all together we get:
It is important to note at this point that "B" is a positive number multiplied by "L", meaning that the
magnetic field is parallel to theorbital angular momentum of the particle.Magnetic Moment of the Electron
The
magnetic moment of the electron is:
where the spin angular momentum vector, is the
Bohr magneton and is the electron sping-factor . Here, is a negative constant multiplied by the spin, so themagnetic moment is antiparallel to the spin angular momentum.Interaction Energy
The interaction energy is:Let's substitute in the derived expressions.
:
We have not, thus far, taken into account the non-inertiality of the electron rest frame; this effect is called
Thomas precession and introduces a factor of . So:
Evaluating the energy shift
Thanks to all the above approximations, we can now evaluate the energy shift exactly in this model. In particular, we wish to find a basis that diagonalizes both "H0" (the non-perturbed Hamiltonian) and "ΔH". To find out what basis this is, we first define the total angular momentum
operator :
Taking the dot product of this with itself, we get
:
(since L and S commute), and therefore
:
It can be shown that the five operators "H0", "J"², "L"², "S"², and "Jz" all commute with each other and with "ΔH". Therefore, the basis we were looking for is the simultaneous
eigenbasis of these five operators (i.e., the basis where all five are diagonal). Elements of this basis have the fivequantum number s: "n" (the "principal quantum number") "j" (the "total angular momentum quantum number"), "l" (the "orbital angular momentum quantum number"), "s" (the "spin quantum number"), and "jz" (the "z"-component of total angular momentum").To evaluate the energies, we note that
:
for hydrogenic wavefunctions (here is the
Bohr radius divided by the nuclear charge "Z"); and::
Final Energy Shift
We can now say
:
where
:
For hydrogen, we can write the explicit result:
For any singly-ionized atom which has Z protons:
ee also
*
Stark effect
*Zeeman effect References
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