Physical Chemistry Third Edition

(C. Jardin) #1

15.2 The Schrödinger Equation 657


With slit 2 closed With slit 1 closed

(a)

(b)

(c)

Detector screen which
glows where electrons
strike

Barrier with
two slits

Electron
source

Pattern of
glowing
bands

Figure 15.2 A Hypothetical Experiment with Electrons Passing through Two Slits.
(a) The Apparatus. (b) The intensity of the glow due to electrons arriving at the screen in
figure (a) with both slits open. (c) The intensity of the glow due to electrons arriving at the
screen in (a) with one slit open at a time.

15.2 The Schrödinger Equation

If electrons and other particles act like waves, they should obey a wave equation.
In 1926, Erwin Schrödinger published a series of four articles containing a wave equa-
tion for de Broglie waves, which we now call the Schrödinger equation. The first three
articles presented the time-independent version of the wave equation and applied it to
the hydrogen atom, rotation and vibration of diatomic molecules, and the effect of an
external electric field on energy levels. The time-dependent version of the equation
was reported in the fourth article.^4

Erwin Schrödinger, 1887–1961, was an
Austrian physicist who shared the 1933
Nobel Prize in physics with P. A. M.
Dirac, who pioneered the development
of relativistic quantum mechanics.


(^4) The time-independent equations were presented inAnn. Physik, 79 , 361 (1926), 79 , 489 (1926), and
80 , 437 (1926), and the time-dependent equation was presented inAnn. Physik, 81 , 109 (1926).

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