In quantum physics and chemistry, quantum numbers are quantities that characterize the possible states of the system. To fully specify the state of the electron in a hydrogen atom, four quantum numbers are needed. The traditional set of quantum numbers includes the principal, azimuthal, magnetic, and spin quantum numbers. To describe other systems, different quantum numbers are required. For subatomic particles, one needs to introduce new quantum numbers, such as the flavour of quarks, which have no classical correspondence.
Quantum numbers are closely related to eigenvalues of . When the corresponding observable commutes with the Hamiltonian of the system, the quantum number is said to be "good", and acts as a constant of motion in the quantum dynamics.
As Bohr notes in his subsequent Nobel lecture, the next step was taken by Arnold Sommerfeld in 1915. Niels Bohr – Nobel Lecture. NobelPrize.org. Nobel Prize Outreach AB 2024. Sun. 25 Feb 2024. Sommerfeld's atomic model added a second quantum number and the concept of quantized phase integrals to justify them.
A consequence of space quantization was that the electron's orbital interaction with an external magnetic field would be quantized. This seemed to be confirmed when the results of the Stern-Gerlach experiment reported quantized results for silver atoms in an inhomogeneous magnetic field. The confirmation would turn out to be premature: more quantum numbers would be needed.
The fourth and fifth quantum numbers of the atomic era arose from attempts to understand the Zeeman effect. Like the Stern-Gerlach experiment, the Zeeman effect reflects the interaction of atoms with a magnetic field; in a weak field the experimental results were called "anomalous", they diverged from any theory at the time. Wolfgang Pauli's solution to this issue was to introduce another quantum number taking only two possible values, . This would ultimately become the quantized values of the projection of spin, an intrinsic angular momentum quantum of the electron. In 1927 Ronald Fraser demonstrated that the quantization in the Stern-Gerlach experiment was due to the magnetic moment associated with the electron spin rather than its orbital angular momentum. Pauli's success in developing the arguments for a spin quantum number without relying on classical models set the stage for the development of quantum numbers for elementary particles in the remainder of the 20th century.
Bohr, with his Aufbau principle or "building up" principle, and Pauli with his exclusion principle connected the atom's electronic quantum numbers in to a framework for predicting the properties of atoms. When Schrödinger published his wave equation and calculated the energy levels of hydrogen, these two principles carried over to become the basis of atomic physics.
The tally of quantum numbers varies from system to system and has no universal answer. Hence these parameters must be found for each system to be analyzed. A quantized system requires at least one quantum number. The dynamics (i.e. time evolution) of any quantum system are described by a quantum operator in the form of a Hamiltonian, . There is one quantum number of the system corresponding to the system's energy; i.e., one of the of the Hamiltonian. There is also one quantum number for each linearly independent operator that commutivity with the Hamiltonian. A complete set of commuting observables (CSCO) that commute with the Hamiltonian characterizes the system with all its quantum numbers. There is a one-to-one relationship between the quantum numbers and the operators of the CSCO, with each quantum number taking one of the eigenvalues of its corresponding operator. As a result of the different basis that may be arbitrarily chosen to form a complete set of commuting operators, different sets of quantum numbers may be used for the description of the same system in different situations.
For example, in caesium (Cs), the outermost valence electron is in the shell with energy level 6, so an electron in caesium can have an value from 1 to 6. The average distance between the electron and the nucleus increases with .
In chemistry and spectroscopy, is called s orbital, , p orbital, , d orbital, and , f orbital.
The value of ranges from 0 to , so the first p orbital () appears in the second electron shell (), the first d orbital () appears in the third shell (), and so on:
A quantum number beginning in , describes an electron in the s orbital of the third electron shell of an atom. In chemistry, this quantum number is very important, since it specifies the shape of an atomic orbital and strongly influences and . The azimuthal quantum number can also denote the number of angular nodes present in an orbital. For example, for p orbitals, and thus the amount of angular nodes in a p orbital is 1.
The values of range from to , with integer intervals.
The s subshell () contains only one orbital, and therefore the of an electron in an s orbital will always be 0. The p subshell () contains three orbitals, so the of an electron in a p orbital will be −1, 0, or 1. The d subshell () contains five orbitals, with values of −2, −1, 0, 1, and 2.
In general, the values of range from to , where is the spin quantum number, associated with the magnitude of particle's intrinsic spin angular momentum:
An electron state has spin number , consequently will be + ("spin up") or − "spin down" states. Since electron are fermions they obey the Pauli exclusion principle: each electron state must have different quantum numbers. Therefore, every orbital will be occupied with at most two electrons, one for each spin state.
For example, consider the following 8 states, defined by their quantum numbers:
The in the system can be described as linear combination of these 8 states. However, in the presence of spin–orbit interaction, if one wants to describe the same system by 8 states that are of the Hamiltonian (i.e. each represents a state that does not mix with others over time), we should consider the following 8 states:
Note: The orbital angular momenta of the nuclear (and atomic) states are all integer multiples of ħ while the intrinsic angular momentum of the neutron and proton are half-integer multiples. It should be immediately apparent that the combination of the intrinsic spins of the nucleons with their orbital motion will always give half-integer values for the total spin, , of any odd-A nucleus and integer values for any even-A nucleus.
Parity with the number is used to label nuclear angular momentum states, examples for some isotopes of hydrogen (H), carbon (C), and sodium (Na) are;
The reason for the unusual fluctuations in , even by differences of just one nucleon, are due to the odd and even numbers of protons and neutrons – pairs of nucleons have a total angular momentum of zero (just like electrons in orbitals), leaving an odd or even number of unpaired nucleons. The property of nuclear spin is an important factor for the operation of NMR spectroscopy in organic chemistry, and MRI in nuclear medicine, due to the nuclear magnetic moment interacting with an external magnetic field.
Typical quantum numbers related to spacetime symmetries are spin (related to rotational symmetry), the parity, C-parity and T-parity (related to the Poincaré symmetry of spacetime). Typical internal symmetries are lepton number and baryon number or the electric charge. (For a full list of quantum numbers of this kind see the article on flavour.)
Nuclear quantum numbers
Connection to symmetry
General properties
Electron in a hydrogen-like atom
These quantum numbers are also used in the classical description of nuclear particle states (e.g. protons and neutrons). A quantum description of molecular orbitals requires other quantum numbers, because the symmetries of the molecular system are different.
Principal quantum number
Azimuthal quantum number
Magnetic quantum number
Spin magnetic quantum number
The Aufbau principle and Hund's Rules
Spin-orbit coupled systems
j = |\ell \pm s|,
which gives the total angular momentum through the relation
m_j = -j, -j + 1, -j + 2, \cdots, j - 2, j - 1, j
analogous to the above and satisfies both and
This is the eigenvalue under reflection: positive (+1) for states which came from even and negative (−1) for states which came from odd . The former is also known as even parity and the latter as odd parity, and is given by P = (-1)^\ell .
>
!
!
!
!
!| rowspan=9 style="border:0px;" !
!
!
>
!|| || parity | coming from state (1) above coming from states (2) and (3) above coming from states (4) and (5) above coming from state (6) above coming from states (2) and (3) above coming from states (4) and (5) above coming from state (7) above coming from state (8) above
Atomic nuclei
> | style="text-align:right;" | || = ()+|| || style="text-align:right;" | || = ()− || || style="text-align:right;" | | = 2+
= ()+ = 3+ = ()+ = 4+ = ()+ = 3+
Elementary particles
Multiplicative quantum numbers
See also
Further reading
|
|