Big Chemical Encyclopedia

Chemical substances, components, reactions, process design ...

Articles Figures Tables About

Wave packet time-dependent

In time-dependent quantum mechanics, vibrational motion may be described as the motion of the wave packet... [Pg.1057]

I i i(q,01 in configuration space, e.g. as defined by the possible values of the position coordinates q. This motion is given by the time evolution of the wave fiinction i(q,t), defined as die projection ( q r(t)) of the time-dependent quantum state i i(t)) on configuration space. Since the quantum state is a complete description of the system, the wave packet defining the probability density can be viewed as the quantum mechanical counterpart of the classical distribution F(q- i t), p - P t)). The time dependence is obtained by solution of the time-dependent Schrodinger equation... [Pg.1057]

Schinke R and Huber J R 1995 Molecular dynamics in excited electronic states—time-dependent wave packet studies Femtosecond Chemistry Proc. Berlin Conf. Femtosecond Chemistry (Berlin, March 1993) (Weinheim Verlag Chemie)... [Pg.1090]

FIdthmann H, Beck C, Schinke R, Woywod C and Domcke W 1997 Photodissociation of ozone in the Chappuis band. II. Time-dependent wave packet calculations and interpretation of diffuse vibrational... [Pg.1090]

We present state-to-state transition probabilities on the ground adiabatic state where calculations were performed by using the extended BO equation for the N = 3 case and a time-dependent wave-packet approach. We have already discussed this approach in the N = 2 case. Here, we have shown results at four energies and all of them are far below the point of Cl, that is, E = 3.0 eV. [Pg.71]

To deal with the problem of using a superposition of functions, Heller also tried using Gaussian wave packets with a fixed width as a time-dependent basis set for the representation of the evolving nuclear wave function [23]. Each frozen Gaussian function evolves under classical equations of motion, and the phase is provided by the classical action along the path... [Pg.275]

Electron Nuclear Dynamics (48) departs from a variational form where the state vector is both explicitly and implicitly time-dependent. A coherent state formulation for electron and nuclear motion is given and the relevant parameters are determined as functions of time from the Euler equations that define the stationary point of the functional. Yngve and his group have currently implemented the method for a determinantal electronic wave function and products of wave packets for the nuclei in the limit of zero width, a "classical" limit. Results are coming forth protons on methane (49), diatoms in laser fields (50), protons on water (51), and charge transfer (52) between oxygen and protons. [Pg.13]

In the DC-biased structures considered here, the dynamics are dominated by electronic states in the conduction band [1]. A simplified version of the theory assumes that the excitation occurs only at zone center. This reduces the problem to an n-level system (where n is approximately equal to the number of wells in the structure), which can be solved using conventional first-order perturbation theory and wave-packet methods. A more advanced version of the theory includes all of the hole states and electron states subsumed by the bandwidth of the excitation laser, as well as the perpendicular k states. In this case, a density-matrix picture must be used, which requires a solution of the time-dependent Liouville equation. Substituting the Hamiltonian into the Liouville equation leads to a modified version of the optical Bloch equations [13,15]. These equations can be solved readily, if the k states are not coupled (i.e., in the absence of Coulomb interactions). [Pg.251]

Time dependent wave packet analysis of FOIST... [Pg.262]

In the time dependent wave packet analysis (21) the Schrodinger equation... [Pg.266]

Section II discusses the real wave packet propagation method we have found useful for the description of several three- and four-atom problems. As with many other wave packet or time-dependent quantum mechanical methods, as well as iterative diagonalization procedures for time-independent problems, repeated actions of a Hamiltonian matrix on a vector represent the major computational bottleneck of the method. Section III discusses relevant issues concerning the efficient numerical representation of the wave packet and the action of the Hamiltonian matrix on a vector in four-atom dynamics problems. Similar considerations apply to problems with fewer or more atoms. Problems involving four or more atoms can be computationally very taxing. Modern (parallel) computer architectures can be exploited to reduce the physical time to solution and Section IV discusses some parallel algorithms we have developed. Section V presents our concluding remarks. [Pg.2]

The RWP method also has features in common with several other accurate, iterative approaches to quantum dynamics, most notably Mandelshtam and Taylor s damped Chebyshev expansion of the time-independent Green s operator [4], Kouri and co-workers time-independent wave packet method [5], and Chen and Guo s Chebyshev propagator [6]. Kroes and Neuhauser also implemented damped Chebyshev iterations in the time-independent wave packet context for a challenging surface scattering calculation [7]. The main strength of the RWP method is that it is derived explicitly within the framework of time-dependent quantum mechanics and allows one to make connections or interpretations that might not be as evident with the other approaches. For example, as will be shown in Section IIB, it is possible to relate the basic iteration step to an actual physical time step. [Pg.3]

We now illustrate the utility of Eq. (27) in relating the RWP dynamics based on the arccosine mapping, Eq. (16), to the usual time-dependent Schrodinger equation dynamics, Eq. (1). We carried out three-dimensional (total angular momentum 7 = 0) wave packet calculations for the... [Pg.8]

The laser intensities are taken to be the possible lowest. The intensity in case (b) is almost three times larger than the others. This is simply due to the fact that the transition dipole moment exponentially decays from the equilibrium position and also the potential energy difference increases. Note again that the coordinate-dependent level approximation works well. In order to demonstrate the selectivity the time evolution of the wave packets on the excited state are shown in Fig 41. As a measure of the selectivity, we have calculated the target yield by... [Pg.170]

Equation (1.27) relates the wave packet F(x, t) at time t to the wave packet F(x, 0) at time f = 0. However, the angular frequency mfk) is dependent on k and the functional form must be known before we can evaluate the integral over k. [Pg.15]

Equation (1.28) relates the wave packet at time t to the wave packet at time t = 0 if the k-dependence of the angular frequency includes terms up to k. The profile of the wave packet y(x, /) changes as time progresses because of... [Pg.16]

The first two chapters serve as an introduction to quantum theory. It is assumed that the student has already been exposed to elementary quantum mechanics and to the historical events that led to its development in an undergraduate physical chemistry course or in a course on atomic physics. Accordingly, the historical development of quantum theory is not covered. To serve as a rationale for the postulates of quantum theory, Chapter 1 discusses wave motion and wave packets and then relates particle motion to wave motion. In Chapter 2 the time-dependent and time-independent Schrodinger equations are introduced along with a discussion of wave functions for particles in a potential field. Some instructors may wish to omit the first or both of these chapters or to present abbreviated versions. [Pg.361]


See other pages where Wave packet time-dependent is mentioned: [Pg.293]    [Pg.101]    [Pg.1063]    [Pg.1063]    [Pg.1065]    [Pg.1069]    [Pg.1069]    [Pg.1071]    [Pg.2115]    [Pg.125]    [Pg.130]    [Pg.266]    [Pg.17]    [Pg.218]    [Pg.258]    [Pg.268]    [Pg.10]    [Pg.10]    [Pg.34]    [Pg.12]    [Pg.162]    [Pg.173]    [Pg.405]    [Pg.409]    [Pg.17]    [Pg.17]    [Pg.229]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.231 ]




SEARCH



State time-dependent wave packet analysis

Time-dependent quantum wave packet

Time-dependent wave packets, scattering

Time-dependent wave packets, scattering states

Wave packet

Wave packet analysis, time-dependent

© 2024 chempedia.info