Abstract
Starting from the analogy between a crystal and molecule, it is shown that the electronic excitation, forming the first step in the process of light absorption, is not confined to a particular atom, but is diluted between all of them in the form of "excitation waves," similar to sound waves which are used to describe the heat motion in the same crystal. Owing to the interaction between the atoms the excitation state is split up into substates whose number is equal to the number of atoms $n$ (excitation multiplet). By superposing several excitation waves "excitation packets" can be constructed representing the travelling of the excitation state from one atom to another. To each excitation sub-state there corresponds a definite crystal structure (lattice constant, vibration frequencies) slightly different from that of the normal, and giving rise to slightly different vibrational states. This influence of the excitation on the vibrational states provides an indirect coupling between them, which allows the excitation energy to be shared between a few hundred heat-oscillators with practically no direct coupling nor anharmonicity in a radiationless transition which forms the second state of the process of light absorption.
Keywords
Affiliated Institutions
Related Publications
The electronic states of Ar+2, Kr+2, Xe+2. I. Potential curves with and without spin–orbit coupling
The low-lying states of Ar+2, Kr+2, and Xe+2 have been investigated using the POL CI method. Spin–orbit coupling has been included with a simple atoms-in-molecule approach. The ...
Magnetization Oscillations and Waves
Isotropic Ferromagnet Magnetized to Saturation Ferromagnetism Elementary Magnetic Moments Paramagnetism Weiss Theory Exchange Interaction Equation of Motion of Magnetization Hig...
Ultrafast Electron Transfer Dynamics from Molecular Adsorbates to Semiconductor Nanocrystalline Thin Films
Interfacial electron transfer (ET) between semiconductor nanomaterials and molecular adsorbates is an important fundamental process that is relevant to applications of these mat...
Silicon dioxide and the chalcogenide semiconductors; similarities and differences
Abstract The purpose of this article is to examine current hypotheses about the optical and electrical properties of the amorphous chalcogenide semiconductors, and to examine wh...
Electron-impact excitation of neutral oxygen
Aims: To calculate transition rates from ground and excited states in neutral oxygen atoms due to electron collisions for non-LTE modelling of oxygen in late-type stellar atmosp...
Publication Info
- Year
- 1931
- Type
- article
- Volume
- 37
- Issue
- 1
- Pages
- 17-44
- Citations
- 1016
- Access
- Closed
External Links
Social Impact
Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions
Citation Metrics
Cite This
Identifiers
- DOI
- 10.1103/physrev.37.17