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Fermi's golden rule

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In quantum physics, Fermi's golden rule is a formula that describes the transition rate (the probability of a transition per unit time) from one energy eigenstate of a quantum system to a group of energy eigenstates in a continuum, as a result of a weak perturbation. This transition rate is effectively independent of time (so long as the strength of the perturbation is independent of time) and is proportional to the strength of the coupling between the initial and final states of the system (described by the square of the matrix element of the perturbation) as well as the density of states. It is also applicable when the final state is discrete, i.e. it is not part of a continuum, if there is some decoherence in the process, like relaxation or collision of the atoms, or like noise in the perturbation, in which case the density of states is replaced by the reciprocal of the decoherence bandwidth.

Historical background

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Although the rule is named after Enrico Fermi, most of the work leading to it is due to Paul Dirac, who twenty years earlier had formulated a virtually identical equation, including the three components of a constant, the matrix element of the perturbation and an energy difference.[1][2] It was given this name because, on account of its importance, Fermi called it "golden rule No. 2".[3]

Most uses of the term Fermi's golden rule are referring to "golden rule No. 2", but Fermi's "golden rule No. 1" is of a similar form and considers the probability of indirect transitions per unit time.[4]

The rate and its derivation

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Fermi's golden rule describes a system that begins in an eigenstate of an unperturbed Hamiltonian H0 and considers the effect of a perturbing Hamiltonian H' applied to the system. If H' is time-independent, the system goes only into those states in the continuum that have the same energy as the initial state. If H' is oscillating sinusoidally as a function of time (i.e. it is a harmonic perturbation) with an angular frequency ω, the transition is into states with energies that differ by ħω from the energy of the initial state.

In both cases, the transition probability per unit of time from the initial state to a set of final states is essentially constant. It is given, to first-order approximation, by where is the matrix element (in bra–ket notation) of the perturbation H' between the final and initial states, and is the density of states (number of continuum states divided by in the infinitesimally small energy interval to ) at the energy of the final states. This transition probability is also called "decay probability" and is related to the inverse of the mean lifetime. Thus, the probability of finding the system in state is proportional to .

The standard way to derive the equation is to start with time-dependent perturbation theory and to take the limit for absorption under the assumption that the time of the measurement is much larger than the time needed for the transition.[5][6]

Only the magnitude of the matrix element enters the Fermi's golden rule. The phase of this matrix element, however, contains separate information about the transition process. It appears in expressions that complement the golden rule in the semiclassical Boltzmann equation approach to electron transport.[9]

While the Golden rule is commonly stated and derived in the terms above, the final state (continuum) wave function is often rather vaguely described, and not normalized correctly (and the normalisation is used in the derivation). The problem is that in order to produce a continuum there can be no spatial confinement (which would necessarily discretise the spectrum), and therefore the continuum wave functions must have infinite extent, and in turn this means that the normalisation is infinite, not unity. If the interactions depend on the energy of the continuum state, but not any other quantum numbers, it is usual to normalise continuum wave-functions with energy labelled , by writing where is the Dirac delta function, and effectively a factor of the square-root of the density of states is included into .[10] In this case, the continuum wave function has dimensions of , and the Golden Rule is now where refers to the continuum state with the same energy as the discrete state . For example, correctly normalized continuum wave functions for the case of a free electron in the vicinity of a hydrogen atom are available in Bethe and Salpeter.[11]

Normalized Derivation in time-dependent perturbation theory

The following paraphrases the treatment of Cohen-Tannoudji.[10] As before, the total Hamiltonian is the sum of an “original” Hamiltonian H0 and a perturbation: . We can still expand an arbitrary quantum state’s time evolution in terms of energy eigenstates of the unperturbed system, but these now consist of discrete states and continuum states. We assume that the interactions depend on the energy of the continuum state, but not any other quantum numbers. The expansion in the relevant states in the Dirac picture is where , and are the energies of states , respectively. The integral is over the continuum , i.e. is in the continuum.

Substituting into the time-dependent Schrödinger equation and premultiplying by produces where , and premultiplying by produces We made use of the normalisation . Integrating the latter and substituting into the former, It can be seen here that at time depends on at all earlier times , i.e. it is non-Markovian. We make the Markov approximation, i.e. that it only depends on at time (which is less restrictive than the approximation that used above, and allows the perturbation to be strong) where and . Integrating over , The fraction on the right is a nascent Dirac delta function, meaning it tends to as (ignoring its imaginary part which leads to a very small energy (Lamb) shift, while the real part produces decay [10]). Finally which can have solutions: , i.e., the decay of population in the initial discrete state is where

Applications

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Semiconductors

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The Fermi's golden rule can be used for calculating the transition probability rate for an electron that is excited by a photon from the valence band to the conduction band in a direct band-gap semiconductor, and also for when the electron recombines with the hole and emits a photon.[12] Consider a photon of frequency and wavevector , where the light dispersion relation is and is the index of refraction.

Using the Coulomb gauge where and , the vector potential of light is given by where the resulting electric field is

For an electron in the valence band, the Hamiltonian is where is the potential of the crystal, and are the charge and mass of an electron, and is the momentum operator. Here we consider process involving one photon and first order in . The resulting Hamiltonian is where is the perturbation of light.

From here on we consider vertical optical dipole transition, and thus have transition probability based on time-dependent perturbation theory that with where is the light polarization vector. and are the Bloch wavefunction of the initial and final states. Here the transition probability needs to satisfy the energy conservation given by . From perturbation it is evident that the heart of the calculation lies in the matrix elements shown in the bracket.

For the initial and final states in valence and conduction bands, we have and , respectively and if the operator does not act on the spin, the electron stays in the same spin state and hence we can write the Bloch wavefunction of the initial and final states as where is the number of unit cells with volume . Calculating using these wavefunctions, and focusing on emission (photoluminescence) rather than absorption, we are led to the transition rate where defined as the optical transition dipole moment is qualitatively the expectation value and in this situation takes the form

Finally, we want to know the total transition rate . Hence we need to sum over all possible initial and final states that can satisfy the energy conservation (i.e. an integral of the Brillouin zone in the k-space), and take into account spin degeneracy, which after calculation results in where is the joint valence-conduction density of states (i.e. the density of pair of states; one occupied valence state, one empty conduction state). In 3D, this is but the joint DOS is different for 2D, 1D, and 0D.

We note that in a general way we can express the Fermi's golden rule for semiconductors as[13]

In the same manner, the stationary DC photocurrent with amplitude proportional to the square of the field of light is where is the relaxation time, and are the difference of the group velocity and Fermi-Dirac distribution between possible the initial and final states. Here defines the optical transition dipole. Due to the commutation relation between position and the Hamiltonian, we can also rewrite the transition dipole and photocurrent in terms of position operator matrix using . This effect can only exist in systems with broken inversion symmetry and nonzero components of the photocurrent can be obtained by symmetry arguments.

Scanning tunneling microscopy

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In a scanning tunneling microscope, the Fermi's golden rule is used in deriving the tunneling current. It takes the form where is the tunneling matrix element.

Quantum optics

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When considering energy level transitions between two discrete states, Fermi's golden rule is written as where is the density of photon states at a given energy, is the photon energy, and is the angular frequency. This alternative expression relies on the fact that there is a continuum of final (photon) states, i.e. the range of allowed photon energies is continuous.[14]

Drexhage experiment

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Both the radiation pattern and the total emitted power (which is proportional to the decay rate) of a dipole depend on its distance from a mirror.

Fermi's golden rule predicts that the probability that an excited state will decay depends on the density of states. This can be seen experimentally by measuring the decay rate of a dipole near a mirror: as the presence of the mirror creates regions of higher and lower density of states, the measured decay rate depends on the distance between the mirror and the dipole.[15][16]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Bransden, B. H.; Joachain, C. J. (1999). Quantum Mechanics (2nd ed.). Prentice Hall. p. 443. ISBN 978-0582356917.
  2. ^ Dirac, P. A. M. (1 March 1927). "The Quantum Theory of Emission and Absorption of Radiation". Proceedings of the Royal Society A. 114 (767): 243–265. Bibcode:1927RSPSA.114..243D. doi:10.1098/rspa.1927.0039. JSTOR 94746. See equations (24) and (32).
  3. ^ Fermi, E. (1950). Nuclear Physics. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0226243658. formula VIII.2
  4. ^ Fermi, E. (1950). Nuclear Physics. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0226243658. formula VIII.19
  5. ^ R Schwitters' UT Notes on Derivation.
  6. ^ It is remarkable in that the rate is constant and not linearly increasing in time, as might be naively expected for transitions with strict conservation of energy enforced. This comes about from interference of oscillatory contributions of transitions to numerous continuum states with only approximate unperturbed energy conservation, see Wolfgang Pauli, Wave Mechanics: Volume 5 of Pauli Lectures on Physics (Dover Books on Physics, 2000) ISBN 0486414620, pp. 150–151.
  7. ^ Landau, L. D., & Lifshitz, E. M. (2013). Quantum mechanics: non-relativistic theory (Vol. 3). Elsevier.
  8. ^ Merzbacher, Eugen (1998). "19.7" (PDF). Quantum Mechanics (3rd ed.). Wiley, John & Sons, Inc. ISBN 978-0-471-88702-7.
  9. ^ N. A. Sinitsyn, Q. Niu and A. H. MacDonald (2006). "Coordinate Shift in Semiclassical Boltzmann Equation and Anomalous Hall Effect". Phys. Rev. B. 73 (7): 075318. arXiv:cond-mat/0511310. Bibcode:2006PhRvB..73g5318S. doi:10.1103/PhysRevB.73.075318. S2CID 119476624.
  10. ^ a b c Cohen-Tannoudji, Claude; Diu, Bernard; Laloë, Franck (1977). Quantum Mechanics Vol II Chapter XIII Complement D_{XIII}. Wiley. ISBN 978-0471164333.
  11. ^ Bethe, Hans; Salpeter, Edwin (1977). Quantum Mechanics of One- and Two-Electron Atoms. Springer, Boston, MA. ISBN 978-0-306-20022-9.
  12. ^ Yu, Peter Y.; Cardona, Manuel (2010). Fundamentals of Semiconductors - Physics and Materials Properties (4 ed.). Springer. p. 260. doi:10.1007/978-3-642-00710-1. ISBN 978-3-642-00709-5.
  13. ^ Edvinsson, T. (2018). "Optical quantum confinement and photocatalytic properties in two-, one- and zero-dimensional nanostructures". Royal Society Open Science. 5 (9): 180387. Bibcode:2018RSOS....580387E. doi:10.1098/rsos.180387. ISSN 2054-5703. PMC 6170533. PMID 30839677.
  14. ^ Fox, Mark (2006). Quantum Optics: An Introduction. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 51. ISBN 9780198566731.
  15. ^ K. H. Drexhage; H. Kuhn; F. P. Schäfer (1968). "Variation of the Fluorescence Decay Time of a Molecule in Front of a Mirror". Berichte der Bunsengesellschaft für physikalische Chemie. 72 (2): 329. doi:10.1002/bbpc.19680720261. S2CID 94677437.
  16. ^ K. H. Drexhage (1970). "Influence of a dielectric interface on fluorescence decay time". Journal of Luminescence. 1: 693–701. Bibcode:1970JLum....1..693D. doi:10.1016/0022-2313(70)90082-7.
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