17.1 The Hydrogen Atom and the Central Force System 727
wherevcandvare the velocity of the center of mass and the relative velocity:vcxdxc
dtand vxdx
dt(17.1-7)
with similar equations forvcy,vcz,vy, andvz. Thereduced massμis defined byμmnme
mn+memnme
M(17.1-8)
Since the nucleus is much more massive than the electron, the reduced mass is nearly
equal to the electron mass and the center of mass is close to the nucleus.
In order to construct the Hamiltonian operator for the hydrogen atom we must
express the kinetic energy in terms of momentum components. The center of mass
momentum components arepcxMvcx, pcyMvcy, pczMvcz (17.1-9)The components of the relative momentum arepxμvx, pyμvy, pzμvz (17.1-10)The classical Hamiltonian isHcl1
2 M
(
p^2 cx+p^2 cy+p^2 cz)
+
1
2 μ(
p^2 x+p^2 y+p^2 z)
+V(r) (17.1-11)whereris now expressed in terms ofx,y, andz:r(x^2 +y^2 +z^2 )^1 /^2 (17.1-12)The Hamiltonian operator is obtained by the replacements specified in Eq. (16.3-8) and
its analogues:Ĥ−h ̄2
2 M(
∂^2
∂x^2 c+
∂^2
∂y^2 c+
∂^2
∂z^2 c)
− ̄
h^2
2 μ(
∂^2
∂x^2+
∂^2
∂y^2+
∂^2
∂z^2)
+V(r)−
h ̄^2
2 M∇^2 c−h ̄^2
2 μ∇^2 +V(r) (17.1-13)The two operators∇c^2 and∇^2 areLaplacian operators, as defined in Eq. (15.2-26) and
in Eq. (B-45) of Appendix B.
The first term in the Hamiltonian operator is thecenter-of-mass HamiltonianĤc−h ̄2
2 M∇^2 c (17.1-14)and the other two terms are therelative HamiltonianĤrel−h ̄2
2 μ∇^2 +V(r) (17.1-15)The time-independent Schrödinger equation is
(
̂Hc+̂Hrel