Particle in a spherically symmetric potential
The Particle in a spherically symmetric potential describes a particle in a central force field, i.e.,with potential depending only on the distance of the particle to the center of force (radial dependency) with no angular dependency. In its quantum mechanical formulation, it amounts to solve the Schrödinger equation with potentials V(r) wich depend only on r, the modulus of r.Three special cases arise as of special importance:
- V(r)=0, or solving the vacuum in the basis of spherical harmonics, which serves as a basis for other cases.
- for and 0 (or ) elsewhere, or particle in the spherical square well, useful to describe scattering and bound states in a nucleus or quantum dot.
- V(r)~1/r to describe bound states of atoms, especially hydrogen.
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2 Vacuum case 3 Spherical square well 4 Infinite spherical square well |
General considerations on Schrödinger equation in a spherically symmetric potential
The time independent solution of 3D Schrödinger equation with hamiltonian where is the particle's mass, can be separated in the variables r, θ and φ so that the wavefunction reads:
are the usual Spherical_harmonics, while needs be solved with the so-called radial equation:
It has the shape of the 1D Schrödinger equation for the variable , with a centrifugal term added to V, but r ranges from 0 to rather than over R.
Vacuum case
Let us now consider V(r)=0 (if , replace everywhere E with ). Introducing the dimensionless variable
the equation becomes a Bessel equation for J defined by (whence the notational choice of J):
The solutions of Schrödinger equation in polar coordinates for a particle of mass in vacuum are labelled by three quantum numbers: discrete indices l and m, and k varying continuously in :where , are the spherical Bessel function and are the spherical harmonics.
These solutions represent states of definite angular momentum, rather than of definite (linear) momentum, which are provided by plane waves .
Spherical square well
Let us now consider the potential for , i.e., inside a sphere of radius and zero outside.
We first consider bound states, i.e., states which display the particle mostly inside the box (confined states). Those have an energy E less than the potential outside the sphere, i.e., they have negative energy, and we shall see that there are a discrete number of such states, which we shall compare to positive energy with a continuous spectrum, describing scattering on the sphere (of unbound states). Also worth noticing is that unlike Coulomb potential, featuring an infinite number of discrete bound states, the spherical square well has only a finite (if any) number because of its finite range (if it has finite depth).
The resolution essentially follows that of the vacuum with normalisation of the total wavefunction added, solving two Schrödinger equations—inside and outside the sphere—of the previous kind, i.e., with constant potential. Also the following constraints hold:
- The wavefunction must be regular at the origin.
- The wavefunction and its derivative must be continuous at the potential discontinuity.
- The wavefunction must converge at infinity.
Bound states bring the novelty as compared to the vacuum case that E is now negative (in the vacuum it was to be positive). This, along with third constraint, selects Hankel function of the first kind as the only converging solution at infinity (the singularity at the origin of these functions does not matter since we are now outside the sphere):
Infinite spherical square well
In case where the potential is infinitely deep, so that we can take inside the sphere and outside, the problem becomes that of matching the spherical Bessel function with identically zero wavefunction outside the sphere, thus providing a straightforward connection with the energy spectrum and the zero of spherical Bessel functions since—calling the kth zero of —allowed energies are those for which the radial wavefunction vanishes at the boundary. They go as the square of ordered Bessel J zeros:
Zeros of the first spherical Bessel equations
Calling s, p, d, f, g, h, etc., states with l=0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, etc., respectively, we obtain the following spectrum:
Spectrum of the infinitely deep spherical square well
