Having followed LPHYS1342 and having followed and passed LPHYS1231 are assets.
The prerequisite(s) for this Teaching Unit (Unité d’enseignement – UE) for the programmes/courses that offer this Teaching Unit are specified at the end of this sheet.
In particular:
' In subatomic physics, discoveries at the origin of a consistent description of the processes of strong and weak nuclear interactions are presented (discovery of the electron, nucleus and neutron, cosmic rays, muons, pions). The concepts of binding energy are then described together with a brief introduction to the liquid drop model, the layered model, and the Yukawa potential. The elementary particles that constitute these systems are then introduced very succinctly (without necessarily starting a mathematical description of the fundamental interactions between these elementary particles).
' In atomic physics, after a brief review of the quantum description of the hydrogen atom, the Hartree-Fock model, the configuration interaction and the fine and hyperfine coupling are introduced more precisely. We introduce Einstein coefficients and multipolar radiative transitions. This description is extended to iso-electronic series and negative ions.
' In molecular physics, we introduce the Born-Oppenheimer approximation and we give an introduction to the description of the different degrees of freedom, rotation and vibration, and their mutual interactions.
At the end of this learning unit, the student is able to : | |
1 | a. Contribution of the teaching unit to the learning outcomes of the programme
AA1 : 1.1, 1.3,1.4, 1.6,1.7, 1.8 AA2 : 2.2, 2.3, 2.4 AA3 : 3.2, 3.4, 3.5, 3.6 AA4: 4.1 AA5: 5.1 AA6: 6.3
b. Specific learning outcomes of the teaching unit
At the end of this teaching unit, the student will be able to: 1. explain natural phenomena at subatomic scales in a qualitative way; 2. appreciate the intellectual contribution of the experimental discoveries underlying the theories involved; 3. communicate and appreciate the fundamental theoretical hypotheses of the nuclear models by means of a specific diagrammatical language (probability amplitudes); 4. establish the electronic structure of an atom, especially spectral terms and electronic configurations; 5. describe the first nuclear-related states by applying the basic principles of quantum physics; 6. describe the classical nucleon-nucleon potential in the context of quantum physics and establish the correspondence between the amplitude (in space-time) of a process and its description in the centre-of-mass frame of reference; 7. describe and apply the basic principles of atomic spectroscopy, including selection rules; 8. describe the Hartree-Fock approach and the configuration interaction, and apply them to the numerical calculation of binding energies and dipolar matrix elements; 9. properly manipulate atomic databases to derive transition frequencies, lifetimes, and branching ratios. 10. describe the fundamentals of molecular physics, in particular the quantum description of molecular systems using molecular Hamiltonians and the corresponding (time dependent and time independent) Schrödinger equations; 11. interpret the various representations of these equations and discuss their approximate solutions, in particular the adiabatic and diabatic representations, and the Born-Oppenheimer separation; 12. interpret some simple models of molecular dynamics and spectral analysis; 13. describe the electronic structure, vibrations and rotations of diatomic molecules; 14. describe and apply the basic principles of spin, vibration and electron spectroscopy of diatomic molecules, including the basics of selection rules; 15. describe and apply the basic principles of the experimental approach in nuclear, atomic and molecular physics. |
The contribution of this Teaching Unit to the development and command of the skills and learning outcomes of the programme(s) can be accessed at the end of this sheet, in the section entitled “Programmes/courses offering this Teaching Unit”.
1.1 Subatomic, atomic and molecular physics and cosmological connection.
1.2 Review of some principles of experimental techniques.
1.3 Star Spectra and X-rays .
1.4 Discovery of the nucleus and the electron.
II. Atomic physics. (hourly volume of 12h).
2.1 Explanation of the structure of atoms and ions based on a brief review of the results of quantum physics and spectroscopy.
2.2 Hydrogen-like systems, quantum defect, Rydberg states.
2.3 Multi-electron systems: Hartree-Fock method.
2.4 Central field and corrections, coupling schemes, isoelectronic series.
2.5 Radiative transitions, dipole approximation, multipolar transitions, selection rules, radiative cascades.
2.6 Stark effect and atomic polarizability, negative ions.
III Molecular physics (hourly volume of 12h).
3.1 The Born-Oppenheimer approximation.
3.2 Separation of coordinates.
3.3 Electronic states: molecular orbitals and atomic orbitals.
3.4 Vibrational states and rotational states.
3.5 Symmetries of diatomic molecules.
3.6 Correlation diagrams.
3.7 Radiative transitions, selection rules.
IV Nuclear physics (hourly volume of 14h).
4.1 Discovery of the neutron, the first nuclei and concept of isospin strong.
4.2 Introduction to Feynman diagrams.
4.3 Discovery of radioactivity and cosmic radiation (origin and composition).
4.4 Model of the liquid drop.
4.5 Yukawa model of the interaction between nucleons.
4.6 Discoveries of the pawn and the muon.
4.7 Layered nuclear models (Woods-Saxon potential).
4.8 More complete description of alpha, beta and gamma decays.
4.9 Introduction to fusion and nuclear fission.
The pedagogical material for the lectures are the blackboard and slide show. The lectures are intended to introduce the fundamental concepts, to motivate them by showing examples and establishing results, to show their reciprocal links and their relations with the different parts associated with this teaching unit, and to establish links with the rest of the teaching units of the Bachelor in physics.
The practical work sessions aim to learn how to use the ideas and formalism developed in nuclear, atomic and molecular physics to explain the results of laboratory experiments, to choose and use computational methods for their analysis, and to interpret the obtained results.
The laboratories aim to give an introduction to experimental methods in these three disciplines and to validate the theoretical concepts seen during the course or the establishment of theoretical concepts following observation made in the laboratory.
Problem solving with encrypted result.
K. S. Krane, 'Introductory Nuclear Physics", 3rd edition, ISBN: 978-0-471-80553-3.