| Literature DB >> 34062842 |
Stephan Fritzsche1,2,3, Andrey Surzhykov4,5.
Abstract
In atomic and many-particle physics, Green functions often occur as propagators to formally represent the (integration over the) complete spectrum of the underlying Hamiltonian. However, while these functions are very crucial to describing many second- and higher-order perturbation processes, they have hardly been considered and classified for complex atoms. Here, we show how relativistic (many-electron) Green functions can be approximated and systematically improved for few- and many-electron atoms and ions. The representation of these functions is based on classes of virtual excitations, or so-called excitation schemes, with regard to given bound-state reference configurations, and by applying a multi-configuration Dirac-Hartree-Fock expansion of all atomic states involved. A first implementation of these approximate Green functions has been realized in the framework of Jac, the Jena Atomic Calculator, and will facilitate the study of various multi-photon and/or multiple electron (emission) processes.Entities:
Keywords: atom; atomic Green function; atomic cascade; atomic structure; excitation scheme; ion; multi-photon; relativistic; second-order
Year: 2021 PMID: 34062842 PMCID: PMC8125487 DOI: 10.3390/molecules26092660
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Figure 1Comparison of the single- and many-electron spectra (continua) of atoms and ions with complex shell structure. In the relativistic theory, the (a) single-electron energies (solid and dashed blue lines) follows from the solution of the Dirac equation in a proper central-field potential , and which are designated in the (standard) subshell notation, analogue to the hydrogenic atom. Above of the ionization threshold, , there is a single-electron continuum (light blue box) for each symmetry , and which is formally often captured by means of a finite summation (integration) over the pseudo-states. (b) For many-electron atoms, quite similar, the bound-state solutions (solid and dashed blue lines) are still diagonal in the total symmetry of the atomic state functions but now requires a proper coupling (and construction) of the CSF; see text for further details. Again, a many-electron continuum (light red boxes) is associated with each symmetry , although at slightly different threshold energies with regard to the ground-state level. While the subshell occupation (red circles in the left panel) of the many-electron states just refer to the single-electron spectrum, only their total symmetry (and energetic order) are relevant for the classification and distinction of the many-electron continua. The selected occupation and symmetries in both panels refer to neon-like ions with a ground level. For the two-photon absorption of these ions, the dominant E1E1 transition amplitude (1) is based on the symmetry channel, while the channel need to be taken into account, in addition, if the E1M2 multipole excitations are considered as well. Other channels (continua) are not relevant for the example from Section 3.2.
Useful excitation schemes for the construction of approximate Green functions (channels).
| Excitation Scheme & brief Explanation and Implementation |
|---|
| (De-)excitation of a single electron from a set of (non-relativistic) reference configurations: This includes all possible excitations and de-excitations of a single electron into configurations with the |
| (De-)excitation of two electrons from a set of (non-relativistic) configurations: Analogue to above but by including all possible excitations and de-excitations of up to |
| Add a single electron to a set of configurations: This scheme generates all possible configurations with one |
| Remove a single electron from a set of configurations: Generates all configurations with |
| Remove two electrons from a given set of configurations: Analogue as above but with |
| Excite one electron and capture another one: Generates all configurations with |
Figure 2Definition of the data structures AtomicState.Representation (upper panel) to select and specify a representation of an atom or ions, based on a set of reference configurations. One particular representation is the AtomicState.GreenExpansion (middle panel) that specifies an approximate Green function in terms of an excitation scheme and a selected approach for the computation of the (pseudo-) ASF. Finally, the data structure AtomicState.GreenSettings (lower panel) enables the user to control the particular size of the approximate Green function.
Figure 3Definition of the data structure AtomicState.GreenChannel in Jac that help retain the representation of a single channel (continuum) of the approximate Green function (5).
Figure 4Selected printout from the example in Section 3.3.
Excitation energies of the seven low-lying levels from the Green function channel . Energies are shown relative to the ground level and are compared with data available from the NIST Atomic Spectra Database [59]. Results are shown for three computational models. The use of a (I) diagonal CSF basis with and ; (II) the same but for the full Dirac-Coulomb Hamiltonian; and (III) the Dirac-Coulomb Hamiltonian but by including additional (double) excitations with regard to the reference configuration. See text for further explanations.
| Excitation Energies [eV] | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Level | I | II | III | NIST [ | |
|
|
| 254.21 | 253.26 | 252.66 | 252.0784 |
|
| 256.67 | 255.81 | 255.23 | 254.3889 | |
|
|
| 293.60 | 292.49 | 291.80 | 291.5371 |
|
| 297.36 | 296.43 | 295.85 | 295.2012 | |
|
| 301.48 | 300.88 | 300.17 | 298.9385 | |
|
|
| 337.68 | 337.23 | 336.66 | 335.280 |
|
| 340.64 | 339.43 | 338.87 | 337.361 | |
Selected (second-order) properties and atomic processes that require a summation over one or several many-electron continua, i.e., a simple access to a proper representation of Green function channels.
| Property or Process & Brief Explanation |
|---|
Selected data structures of the Jac toolbox that are relevant for the generation of approximate Green functions.
| Data Structure & Brief Explanation |
|---|