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Variational method (quantum mechanics)

In quantum mechanics, the variational method is one way of finding approximations to the lowest energy eigenstate or ground state, and some excited states. This allows calculating approximate wavefunctions such as molecular orbitals.[1] The basis for this method is the variational principle.[2][3]

The method consists of choosing a "trial wavefunction" depending on one or more parameters, and finding the values of these parameters for which the expectation value of the energy is the lowest possible. The wavefunction obtained by fixing the parameters to such values is then an approximation to the ground state wavefunction, and the expectation value of the energy in that state is an upper bound to the ground state energy. The Hartree–Fock method, Density matrix renormalization group, and Ritz method apply the variational method.

Description edit

Suppose we are given a Hilbert space and a Hermitian operator over it called the Hamiltonian  . Ignoring complications about continuous spectra, we consider the discrete spectrum of   and a basis of eigenvectors   (see spectral theorem for Hermitian operators for the mathematical background):

 
where   is the Kronecker delta
 
and the   satisfy the eigenvalue equation
 

Once again ignoring complications involved with a continuous spectrum of  , suppose the spectrum of   is bounded from below and that its greatest lower bound is E0. The expectation value of   in a state   is then

 

If we were to vary over all possible states with norm 1 trying to minimize the expectation value of  , the lowest value would be   and the corresponding state would be the ground state, as well as an eigenstate of  . Varying over the entire Hilbert space is usually too complicated for physical calculations, and a subspace of the entire Hilbert space is chosen, parametrized by some (real) differentiable parameters αi (i = 1, 2, ..., N). The choice of the subspace is called the ansatz. Some choices of ansatzes lead to better approximations than others, therefore the choice of ansatz is important.

Let's assume there is some overlap between the ansatz and the ground state (otherwise, it's a bad ansatz). We wish to normalize the ansatz, so we have the constraints

 
and we wish to minimize
 

This, in general, is not an easy task, since we are looking for a global minimum and finding the zeroes of the partial derivatives of ε over all αi is not sufficient. If ψ(α) is expressed as a linear combination of other functions (αi being the coefficients), as in the Ritz method, there is only one minimum and the problem is straightforward. There are other, non-linear methods, however, such as the Hartree–Fock method, that are also not characterized by a multitude of minima and are therefore comfortable in calculations.

There is an additional complication in the calculations described. As ε tends toward E0 in minimization calculations, there is no guarantee that the corresponding trial wavefunctions will tend to the actual wavefunction. This has been demonstrated by calculations using a modified harmonic oscillator as a model system, in which an exactly solvable system is approached using the variational method. A wavefunction different from the exact one is obtained by use of the method described above.[citation needed]

Although usually limited to calculations of the ground state energy, this method can be applied in certain cases to calculations of excited states as well. If the ground state wavefunction is known, either by the method of variation or by direct calculation, a subset of the Hilbert space can be chosen which is orthogonal to the ground state wavefunction.

 

The resulting minimum is usually not as accurate as for the ground state, as any difference between the true ground state and   results in a lower excited energy. This defect is worsened with each higher excited state.

In another formulation:

 

This holds for any trial φ since, by definition, the ground state wavefunction has the lowest energy, and any trial wavefunction will have energy greater than or equal to it.

Proof: φ can be expanded as a linear combination of the actual eigenfunctions of the Hamiltonian (which we assume to be normalized and orthogonal):

 

Then, to find the expectation value of the Hamiltonian:

 

Now, the ground state energy is the lowest energy possible, i.e.,  . Therefore, if the guessed wave function φ is normalized:

 

In general edit

For a hamiltonian H that describes the studied system and any normalizable function Ψ with arguments appropriate for the unknown wave function of the system, we define the functional

 

The variational principle states that

  •  , where   is the lowest energy eigenstate (ground state) of the hamiltonian
  •   if and only if   is exactly equal to the wave function of the ground state of the studied system.

The variational principle formulated above is the basis of the variational method used in quantum mechanics and quantum chemistry to find approximations to the ground state.

Another facet in variational principles in quantum mechanics is that since   and   can be varied separately (a fact arising due to the complex nature of the wave function), the quantities can be varied in principle just one at a time.[4]

Helium atom ground state edit

The helium atom consists of two electrons with mass m and electric charge e, around an essentially fixed nucleus of mass Mm and charge +2e. The Hamiltonian for it, neglecting the fine structure, is:

 
where ħ is the reduced Planck constant, ε0 is the vacuum permittivity, ri (for i = 1, 2) is the distance of the i-th electron from the nucleus, and |r1r2| is the distance between the two electrons.

If the term Vee = e2/(4πε0|r1r2|), representing the repulsion between the two electrons, were excluded, the Hamiltonian would become the sum of two hydrogen-like atom Hamiltonians with nuclear charge +2e. The ground state energy would then be 8E1 = −109 eV, where E1 is the Rydberg constant, and its ground state wavefunction would be the product of two wavefunctions for the ground state of hydrogen-like atoms:[2]: 262 

 
where a0 is the Bohr radius and Z = 2, helium's nuclear charge. The expectation value of the total Hamiltonian H (including the term Vee) in the state described by ψ0 will be an upper bound for its ground state energy. Vee is −5E1/2 = 34 eV, so H is 8E1 − 5E1/2 = −75 eV.

A tighter upper bound can be found by using a better trial wavefunction with 'tunable' parameters. Each electron can be thought to see the nuclear charge partially "shielded" by the other electron, so we can use a trial wavefunction equal with an "effective" nuclear charge Z < 2: The expectation value of H in this state is:

 

This is minimal for Z = 27/16 implying shielding reduces the effective charge to ~1.69. Substituting this value of Z into the expression for H yields 729E1/128 = −77.5 eV, within 2% of the experimental value, −78.975 eV.[5]

Even closer estimations of this energy have been found using more complicated trial wave functions with more parameters. This is done in physical chemistry via variational Monte Carlo.

References edit

  1. ^ Sommerfeld, Thomas (2011-11-01). "Lorentz Trial Function for the Hydrogen Atom: A Simple, Elegant Exercise". Journal of Chemical Education. 88 (11): 1521–1524. Bibcode:2011JChEd..88.1521S. doi:10.1021/ed200040e. ISSN 0021-9584.
  2. ^ a b Griffiths, D. J. (1995). Introduction to Quantum Mechanics. Upper Saddle River, New Jersey: Prentice Hall. ISBN 978-0-13-124405-4.
  3. ^ Sakurai, J. J. (1994). Tuan, San Fu (ed.). Modern Quantum Mechanics (Revised ed.). Addison–Wesley. ISBN 978-0-201-53929-5.
  4. ^ see Landau, Quantum Mechanics, pg. 58 for some elaboration.
  5. ^ Drake, G.W.F.; Van, Zong-Chao (1994). "Variational eigenvalues for the S states of helium". Chemical Physics Letters. 229 (4–5). Elsevier BV: 486–490. Bibcode:1994CPL...229..486D. doi:10.1016/0009-2614(94)01085-4. ISSN 0009-2614.

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In quantum mechanics the variational method is one way of finding approximations to the lowest energy eigenstate or ground state and some excited states This allows calculating approximate wavefunctions such as molecular orbitals 1 The basis for this method is the variational principle 2 3 The method consists of choosing a trial wavefunction depending on one or more parameters and finding the values of these parameters for which the expectation value of the energy is the lowest possible The wavefunction obtained by fixing the parameters to such values is then an approximation to the ground state wavefunction and the expectation value of the energy in that state is an upper bound to the ground state energy The Hartree Fock method Density matrix renormalization group and Ritz method apply the variational method Contents 1 Description 1 1 In general 2 Helium atom ground state 3 ReferencesDescription editSuppose we are given a Hilbert space and a Hermitian operator over it called the Hamiltonian H displaystyle H nbsp Ignoring complications about continuous spectra we consider the discrete spectrum of H displaystyle H nbsp and a basis of eigenvectors ps l displaystyle psi lambda rangle nbsp see spectral theorem for Hermitian operators for the mathematical background ps l 1 ps l 2 d l 1 l 2 displaystyle left langle psi lambda 1 psi lambda 2 right rangle delta lambda 1 lambda 2 nbsp where d i j displaystyle delta ij nbsp is the Kronecker delta d i j 0 if i j 1 if i j displaystyle delta ij begin cases 0 amp text if i neq j 1 amp text if i j end cases nbsp and the ps l displaystyle psi lambda rangle nbsp satisfy the eigenvalue equation H ps l l ps l displaystyle H left psi lambda right rangle lambda left psi lambda right rangle nbsp Once again ignoring complications involved with a continuous spectrum of H displaystyle H nbsp suppose the spectrum of H displaystyle H nbsp is bounded from below and that its greatest lower bound is E0 The expectation value of H displaystyle H nbsp in a state ps displaystyle psi rangle nbsp is then ps H ps l 1 l 2 S p e c H ps ps l 1 ps l 1 H ps l 2 ps l 2 ps l S p e c H l ps l ps 2 l S p e c H E 0 ps l ps 2 E 0 ps ps displaystyle begin aligned left langle psi right H left psi right rangle amp sum lambda 1 lambda 2 in mathrm Spec H left langle psi psi lambda 1 right rangle left langle psi lambda 1 right H left psi lambda 2 right rangle left langle psi lambda 2 psi right rangle amp sum lambda in mathrm Spec H lambda left left langle psi lambda psi right rangle right 2 geq sum lambda in mathrm Spec H E 0 left left langle psi lambda psi right rangle right 2 E 0 langle psi psi rangle end aligned nbsp If we were to vary over all possible states with norm 1 trying to minimize the expectation value of H displaystyle H nbsp the lowest value would be E 0 displaystyle E 0 nbsp and the corresponding state would be the ground state as well as an eigenstate of H displaystyle H nbsp Varying over the entire Hilbert space is usually too complicated for physical calculations and a subspace of the entire Hilbert space is chosen parametrized by some real differentiable parameters ai i 1 2 N The choice of the subspace is called the ansatz Some choices of ansatzes lead to better approximations than others therefore the choice of ansatz is important Let s assume there is some overlap between the ansatz and the ground state otherwise it s a bad ansatz We wish to normalize the ansatz so we have the constraints ps a ps a 1 displaystyle left langle psi mathbf alpha psi mathbf alpha right rangle 1 nbsp and we wish to minimize e a ps a H ps a displaystyle varepsilon mathbf alpha left langle psi mathbf alpha right H left psi mathbf alpha right rangle nbsp This in general is not an easy task since we are looking for a global minimum and finding the zeroes of the partial derivatives of e over all ai is not sufficient If ps a is expressed as a linear combination of other functions ai being the coefficients as in the Ritz method there is only one minimum and the problem is straightforward There are other non linear methods however such as the Hartree Fock method that are also not characterized by a multitude of minima and are therefore comfortable in calculations There is an additional complication in the calculations described As e tends toward E0 in minimization calculations there is no guarantee that the corresponding trial wavefunctions will tend to the actual wavefunction This has been demonstrated by calculations using a modified harmonic oscillator as a model system in which an exactly solvable system is approached using the variational method A wavefunction different from the exact one is obtained by use of the method described above citation needed Although usually limited to calculations of the ground state energy this method can be applied in certain cases to calculations of excited states as well If the ground state wavefunction is known either by the method of variation or by direct calculation a subset of the Hilbert space can be chosen which is orthogonal to the ground state wavefunction ps ps test ps g r ps test ps gr displaystyle left psi right rangle left psi text test right rangle left langle psi mathrm gr psi text test right rangle left psi text gr right rangle nbsp The resulting minimum is usually not as accurate as for the ground state as any difference between the true ground state and ps gr displaystyle psi text gr nbsp results in a lower excited energy This defect is worsened with each higher excited state In another formulation E ground ϕ H ϕ displaystyle E text ground leq left langle phi right H left phi right rangle nbsp This holds for any trial f since by definition the ground state wavefunction has the lowest energy and any trial wavefunction will have energy greater than or equal to it Proof f can be expanded as a linear combination of the actual eigenfunctions of the Hamiltonian which we assume to be normalized and orthogonal ϕ n c n ps n displaystyle phi sum n c n psi n nbsp Then to find the expectation value of the Hamiltonian H ϕ H ϕ n c n ps n H m c m ps m n m c n ps n E m c m ps m n m c n c m E m ps n ps m n c n 2 E n displaystyle begin aligned left langle H right rangle left langle phi right H left phi right rangle amp left langle sum n c n psi n right H left sum m c m psi m right rangle amp sum n sum m left langle c n psi n right E m left c m psi m right rangle amp sum n sum m c n c m E m left langle psi n psi m right rangle amp sum n c n 2 E n end aligned nbsp Now the ground state energy is the lowest energy possible i e E n E ground displaystyle E n geq E text ground nbsp Therefore if the guessed wave function f is normalized ϕ H ϕ E ground n c n 2 E ground displaystyle left langle phi right H left phi right rangle geq E text ground sum n c n 2 E text ground nbsp In general edit For a hamiltonian H that describes the studied system and any normalizable function PS with arguments appropriate for the unknown wave function of the system we define the functionale PS PS H PS PS PS displaystyle varepsilon left Psi right frac left langle Psi right hat H left Psi right rangle left langle Psi Psi right rangle nbsp The variational principle states that e E 0 displaystyle varepsilon geq E 0 nbsp where E 0 displaystyle E 0 nbsp is the lowest energy eigenstate ground state of the hamiltonian e E 0 displaystyle varepsilon E 0 nbsp if and only if PS displaystyle Psi nbsp is exactly equal to the wave function of the ground state of the studied system The variational principle formulated above is the basis of the variational method used in quantum mechanics and quantum chemistry to find approximations to the ground state Another facet in variational principles in quantum mechanics is that since PS displaystyle Psi nbsp and PS displaystyle Psi dagger nbsp can be varied separately a fact arising due to the complex nature of the wave function the quantities can be varied in principle just one at a time 4 Helium atom ground state editThe helium atom consists of two electrons with mass m and electric charge e around an essentially fixed nucleus of mass M m and charge 2e The Hamiltonian for it neglecting the fine structure is H ℏ 2 2 m 1 2 2 2 e 2 4 p e 0 2 r 1 2 r 2 1 r 1 r 2 displaystyle H frac hbar 2 2m left nabla 1 2 nabla 2 2 right frac e 2 4 pi varepsilon 0 left frac 2 r 1 frac 2 r 2 frac 1 mathbf r 1 mathbf r 2 right nbsp where ħ is the reduced Planck constant e0 is the vacuum permittivity ri for i 1 2 is the distance of the i th electron from the nucleus and r1 r2 is the distance between the two electrons If the term Vee e2 4pe0 r1 r2 representing the repulsion between the two electrons were excluded the Hamiltonian would become the sum of two hydrogen like atom Hamiltonians with nuclear charge 2e The ground state energy would then be 8E1 109 eV where E1 is the Rydberg constant and its ground state wavefunction would be the product of two wavefunctions for the ground state of hydrogen like atoms 2 262 ps r 1 r 2 Z 3 p a 0 3 e Z r 1 r 2 a 0 displaystyle psi mathbf r 1 mathbf r 2 frac Z 3 pi a 0 3 e Z left r 1 r 2 right a 0 nbsp where a0 is the Bohr radius and Z 2 helium s nuclear charge The expectation value of the total Hamiltonian H including the term Vee in the state described by ps0 will be an upper bound for its ground state energy Vee is 5E1 2 34 eV so H is 8E1 5E1 2 75 eV A tighter upper bound can be found by using a better trial wavefunction with tunable parameters Each electron can be thought to see the nuclear charge partially shielded by the other electron so we can use a trial wavefunction equal with an effective nuclear charge Z lt 2 The expectation value of H in this state is H 2 Z 2 27 4 Z E 1 displaystyle left langle H right rangle left 2Z 2 frac 27 4 Z right E 1 nbsp This is minimal for Z 27 16 implying shielding reduces the effective charge to 1 69 Substituting this value of Z into the expression for H yields 729E1 128 77 5 eV within 2 of the experimental value 78 975 eV 5 Even closer estimations of this energy have been found using more complicated trial wave functions with more parameters This is done in physical chemistry via variational Monte Carlo References edit Sommerfeld Thomas 2011 11 01 Lorentz Trial Function for the Hydrogen Atom A Simple Elegant Exercise Journal of Chemical Education 88 11 1521 1524 Bibcode 2011JChEd 88 1521S doi 10 1021 ed200040e ISSN 0021 9584 a b Griffiths D J 1995 Introduction to Quantum Mechanics Upper Saddle River New Jersey Prentice Hall ISBN 978 0 13 124405 4 Sakurai J J 1994 Tuan San Fu ed Modern Quantum Mechanics Revised ed Addison Wesley ISBN 978 0 201 53929 5 see Landau Quantum Mechanics pg 58 for some elaboration Drake G W F Van Zong Chao 1994 Variational eigenvalues for the S states of helium Chemical Physics Letters 229 4 5 Elsevier BV 486 490 Bibcode 1994CPL 229 486D doi 10 1016 0009 2614 94 01085 4 ISSN 0009 2614 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Variational method quantum mechanics amp oldid 1210895975, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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