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Hamiltonian electronic

Molecular aspects of geometric phase are associated with conical intersections between electronic energy surfaces, W(Q), where Q denotes the set of say k vibrational coordinates. In the simplest two-state case, the W Q) are eigen-surfaces of the nuclear coordinate dependent Hermitian electronic Hamiltonian... [Pg.4]

Given a real electronic Hamiltonian, with single-valued adiabatic eigenstates of the form n) = and x ), the matrix elements of A become... [Pg.27]

The electronic factor in the sum j(r, R) arises from the familiar BO electronic Hamiltonian defined for a fixed R. Since this Hamiltonian is independent of the nuclear set Xk(R) cany the e label. As is well known, with each k... [Pg.156]

If V is the total Coulombic potential between all the nuclei and electrons in the system, then, in the absence of any spin-dependent terms, the electronic Hamiltonian is given by... [Pg.183]

The electronic Hamiltonian and the comesponding eigenfunctions and eigenvalues are independent of the orientation of the nuclear body-fixed frame with respect to the space-fixed one, and hence depend only on m. The index i in Eq. (9) can span both discrete and continuous values. The q ) form... [Pg.184]

Traditionally, for molecular systems, one proceeds by considering the electronic Hamiltonian which consists of the quantum mechanical operators for the kinetic energy of the electrons, their mutual Coulombic repulsions, and... [Pg.219]

The full system Hamiltonian is partitioned so as to define an electronic Hamiltonian,... [Pg.257]

The adiabatic picture is the standard one in quantum chemistry for the reason that, not only is it mathematically well defined, but it is also that used in ab initio calculations, which solve the electronic Hamiltonian at a particular nuclear geometry. To see the effects of vibronic coupling on the potential energy surfaces one must move to what is called a diabatic representation [1,65,180, 181]. [Pg.279]

In a diabatic representation, the electronic wave functions are no longer eigenfunctions of the electronic Hamiltonian. The aim is instead that the functions are so chosen that the (nonlocal) non-adiabatic coupling operator matrix, A in Eq. (52), vanishes, and the couplings are represented by (local) potential operators. The nuclear Schrddinger equation is then written... [Pg.279]

Let US consider the simplified Hamiltonian in which the nuclear kinetic energy term is neglected. This also implies that the nuclei are fixed at a certain configuration, and the Hamiltonian describes only the electronic degrees of freedom. This electronic Hamiltonian is... [Pg.402]

For H2, let us write down the zeroth-order electronic Hamiltonian (in atomic unit) ... [Pg.438]

In this work, relativistic effects are included in the no-pah or large component only approximation [13]. The total electronic Hamiltonian is H (r R) = H (r R) + H (r R), where H (r R) is the nom-elativistic Coulomb Hamiltonian and R) is a spin-orbit Hamiltonian. The relativistic (nomelativistic) eigenstates, are eigenfunctions of R)(H (r R)). Lower (upper)... [Pg.452]

Until now we have implicitly assumed that our problem is formulated in a space-fixed coordinate system. However, electronic wave functions are naturally expressed in the system bound to the molecule otherwise they generally also depend on the rotational coordinate 4>. (This is not the case for E electronic states, for which the wave functions are invariant with respect to (j> ) The eigenfunctions of the electronic Hamiltonian, v / and v , computed in the framework of the BO approximation ( adiabatic electronic wave functions) for two electronic states into which a spatially degenerate state of linear molecule splits upon bending. [Pg.484]

We write them as i / (9) to shess that now we use the space-fixed coordinate frame. We shall call this basis diabatic, because the functions (26) are not the eigenfunction of the electronic Hamiltonian. The matrix elements of are... [Pg.487]

For vei y small vibronic coupling, the quadratic terms in the power series expansion of the electronic Hamiltonian in normal coordinates (see Appendix E) may be considered to be negligible, and hence the potential energy surface has rotational symmetry but shows no separate minima at the bottom of the moat. In this case, the pair of vibronic levels Aj and A2 in < 3 become degenerate by accident, and the D3/, quantum numbers (vi,V2,/2) may be used to label the vibronic levels of the X3 molecule. When the coupling of the... [Pg.591]

We follow Thompson and Mead [13] to discuss the behavior of the electronic Hamiltonian, potential energy, and derivative coupling between adiabatic states in the vicinity of the D31, conical intersection. Let A be an operator that transforms only the nuclear coordinates, and A be one that acts on the electronic degrees of freedom alone. Clearly, the electronic Hamiltonian satisfies... [Pg.627]

In his book [16], Hagedorn classifies all energy level crossings that can occur generically with an electronic Hamiltonian according to the associated symmetries. Each symmetry yields a finite number of typical, generic energy level... [Pg.388]

Molecular quan turn mcchan ics finds the solution to a Sch rddinger equation for an electronic Hamiltonian, H i, that gives a total energy, K(,. (.(R) + (R.R). Repeated solutions at different nuclear configurations, R, lead to some approximate potential energy sur-... [Pg.164]

While the equations of the Hartree-Fock approach can he rigorously derived, we present them post hoc and give a physical description of the approximations leading to them. The Hartree-Fock method introduces an effective one-electron Hamiltonian. as in equation (47) on page 194 ... [Pg.224]

I h e preceding discussion mean s that tli e Matrix etjuatiori s already described are correct, except that the Fuck matrix, F. replaces the effective one-electron Hamiltonian matrix, and th at K depends on th e solution C ... [Pg.225]

In an ab initio method, all the integrals over atom ic orbital basis function s are com puted and the bock in atrix of th e SCK com puta-tiori is formed (equation (6 1) on page 225) from the in tegrals. Th e Kock matrix divides inui two parts the one-electron Hamiltonian matrix, H, and the two-electron matrix, G, with the matrix ele-m en ts... [Pg.251]

Ihe Fock operator is an effective one-electron Hamiltonian for the electron in the poly-tiectronic system. However, written in this form of Equation (2.130), the Hartree-Fock... [Pg.73]


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Atomic Hamiltonian many-electron atom

Atomic Many-Electron Hamiltonian

Block diagonalization of the electronic Hamiltonian

Born-Oppenheimer approximation electronic Hamiltonian

Derivation of the many-electron Hamiltonian

Dirac one-electron Hamiltonian

Effective one-electron Hamiltonian

Effective one-electron spin-orbit Hamiltonians

Electron Hamiltonians

Electron Hamiltonians

Electron transfer Hamiltonian

Electron-nucleus Hamiltonian

Electron-phonon Hamiltonian

Electronic Hamiltonian effective

Electronic Hamiltonian energy dependence

Electronic Hamiltonian equation, zero-order

Electronic Hamiltonian function

Electronic Hamiltonian mapping

Electronic Hamiltonian operators

Electronic Hamiltonian symmetry operators with

Electronic Hamiltonian, conical intersections

Electronic Hamiltonian, conical intersections spin-orbit interaction

Electronic Hamiltonian, use

Electronic Hamiltonians

Electronic Hamiltonians

Electronic configuration Hamiltonian operator

Electronic excited states Hamiltonian

Electronic interactions in the nuclear Hamiltonian

Electronic structure Hamiltonians

Electronic subsystems Hamiltonian

Free-electron Hamiltonian

Ground-state wave function electronic Hamiltonian, spin-orbit

Halogens, electrons Hamiltonian

Hamiltonian 2-electron

Hamiltonian determination from electron density

Hamiltonian diatomic electronic

Hamiltonian electron electric dipole moment

Hamiltonian electron kinetic energy

Hamiltonian electronic, eigenfunctions

Hamiltonian electronic/nuclear, distinguishing

Hamiltonian equations, electron spin resonance

Hamiltonian for electronic systems

Hamiltonian for electrons

Hamiltonian many-electron

Hamiltonian many-electron atoms

Hamiltonian many-electron+nucleus

Hamiltonian many-electron, transformed

Hamiltonian matrix, electron correlation

Hamiltonian matrix, electron correlation configuration interaction

Hamiltonian molecular electronic

Hamiltonian operator electronic structure calculations

Hamiltonian operator electrons

Hamiltonian operator many-electron atoms

Hamiltonian operator purely electronic

Hamiltonian operators electron correlation methods

Hamiltonian operators electronic structure methods

Hamiltonian target electronic

Hamiltonian valence-electron

Hamiltonian with electrons identified

Hamiltonians electronic Hamiltonian

Hamiltonians electronic Hamiltonian

Hamiltonians subsystem electronic charges

Interaction Hamiltonian electronic

Magnetic Hamiltonian with electron and nuclear spins

Magnetic Hamiltonian with electron spin

Many Electron Relativistic Hamiltonian

Many-Electron Hamiltonian and Energy

Many-electron Hamiltonian operator

Model electronic Hamiltonian

Normal-ordered electron Hamiltonian

One-Electron Electrostatic Hamiltonian

One-electron Hamiltonian

One-electron Hamiltonians

Purely electronic Hamiltonian

Relativistic Hamiltonian for many-electron systems

Relativistic many-electron Hamiltonians

Relativistic model Hamiltonians for many-electron systems

Relativistic one-electron Hamiltonian terms

Relativistic two-electron Hamiltonian terms

Rotational Hamiltonian for space-quantised electron spin

Scaled Hamiltonians electronic Hamiltonian

Second quantization formalism electronic Hamiltonian

Single-electron Dirac Hamiltonian

Single-electron Hamiltonian

Spin Hamiltonian electronic Zeeman interaction

Spin Hamiltonian electronic structure theory

Spin-orbit coupling electronic Hamiltonian

Spin-orbit interaction electronic Hamiltonian

Symmetry of the One-electron Approximation Hamiltonian

Tensor Structure of the Many-Electron Hamiltonian and Wave Function

The Molecular Electronic Hamiltonian

The Normal-Ordered Electronic Hamiltonian

The V-electron Hamiltonian

The electronic Hamiltonian

Time Reversal and Symmetry in the Many-Electron Hamiltonian

Time-dependent electronic Hamiltonian

Total electronic hamiltonian

Vibrons electron-vibron Hamiltonian

Zeeman energy Hamiltonian, electronic

Zero-order electronic Hamiltonian

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