A. N. Mendoza-Tavera, H. Olivares-Pilón, M. Rodríguez-Arcos, A. M. Escobar-Ruiz
{"title":"磁场中的圆柱约束氢原子:变分截止因子","authors":"A. N. Mendoza-Tavera, H. Olivares-Pilón, M. Rodríguez-Arcos, A. M. Escobar-Ruiz","doi":"10.1007/s00601-025-02001-y","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<div><p>In the present study, we consider the hydrogen atom confined within an impenetrable infinite cylindrical cavity of radius <span>\\(\\rho _{0}\\)</span> in the presence of a constant magnetic field <span>\\(\\textbf{B} = B\\,\\hat{\\textbf{z}}\\)</span> oriented along the main cylinder’s axis. In the Born-Oppenheimer approximation, anchoring the nucleus to the geometric center of the cylinder, a physically meaningful 3-parametric trial function is used to determine the ground state energy <i>E</i> of the system. This trial function incorporates the exact symmetries and key limiting behaviors of the problem explicitly. In particular, it does not treat the Coulomb potential nor the magnetic interaction as a <i>perturbation</i>. The novel inclusion of a variational cut-off factor <span>\\(\\big (1 - \\big (\\frac{\\rho }{\\rho _0}\\big )^\\nu \\big )\\)</span>, <span>\\(\\nu \\ge 1\\)</span>, appears to represent a significant improvement compared to the non-variational cut-off factors commonly employed in the literature. The dependence of the total energy <span>\\(E=E(\\rho _0,\\,B)\\)</span> and the binding energy <span>\\(E_b=E_b(\\rho _0,\\,B)\\)</span> on the cavity radius <span>\\(\\rho _0 \\in [0.8,\\,5] \\,\\)</span>a.u. and the magnetic field strength <span>\\(B\\in [0.0,\\,1.0]\\,\\)</span>a.u. is presented in detail. The expectation values <span>\\(\\langle \\rho \\rangle \\)</span> and <span>\\(\\langle |z| \\rangle \\)</span>, and the Shannon entropy in position space are computed to provide additional insights into the system’s localization. A brief discussion is provided comparing the 2D and 3D cases as well.</p></div>","PeriodicalId":556,"journal":{"name":"Few-Body Systems","volume":"66 3","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":1.8000,"publicationDate":"2025-07-11","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.1007/s00601-025-02001-y.pdf","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Cylindrically Confined Hydrogen Atom in Magnetic Field: Variational Cut-Off Factor\",\"authors\":\"A. N. Mendoza-Tavera, H. Olivares-Pilón, M. Rodríguez-Arcos, A. M. Escobar-Ruiz\",\"doi\":\"10.1007/s00601-025-02001-y\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<div><p>In the present study, we consider the hydrogen atom confined within an impenetrable infinite cylindrical cavity of radius <span>\\\\(\\\\rho _{0}\\\\)</span> in the presence of a constant magnetic field <span>\\\\(\\\\textbf{B} = B\\\\,\\\\hat{\\\\textbf{z}}\\\\)</span> oriented along the main cylinder’s axis. In the Born-Oppenheimer approximation, anchoring the nucleus to the geometric center of the cylinder, a physically meaningful 3-parametric trial function is used to determine the ground state energy <i>E</i> of the system. This trial function incorporates the exact symmetries and key limiting behaviors of the problem explicitly. In particular, it does not treat the Coulomb potential nor the magnetic interaction as a <i>perturbation</i>. The novel inclusion of a variational cut-off factor <span>\\\\(\\\\big (1 - \\\\big (\\\\frac{\\\\rho }{\\\\rho _0}\\\\big )^\\\\nu \\\\big )\\\\)</span>, <span>\\\\(\\\\nu \\\\ge 1\\\\)</span>, appears to represent a significant improvement compared to the non-variational cut-off factors commonly employed in the literature. The dependence of the total energy <span>\\\\(E=E(\\\\rho _0,\\\\,B)\\\\)</span> and the binding energy <span>\\\\(E_b=E_b(\\\\rho _0,\\\\,B)\\\\)</span> on the cavity radius <span>\\\\(\\\\rho _0 \\\\in [0.8,\\\\,5] \\\\,\\\\)</span>a.u. and the magnetic field strength <span>\\\\(B\\\\in [0.0,\\\\,1.0]\\\\,\\\\)</span>a.u. is presented in detail. The expectation values <span>\\\\(\\\\langle \\\\rho \\\\rangle \\\\)</span> and <span>\\\\(\\\\langle |z| \\\\rangle \\\\)</span>, and the Shannon entropy in position space are computed to provide additional insights into the system’s localization. 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Cylindrically Confined Hydrogen Atom in Magnetic Field: Variational Cut-Off Factor
In the present study, we consider the hydrogen atom confined within an impenetrable infinite cylindrical cavity of radius \(\rho _{0}\) in the presence of a constant magnetic field \(\textbf{B} = B\,\hat{\textbf{z}}\) oriented along the main cylinder’s axis. In the Born-Oppenheimer approximation, anchoring the nucleus to the geometric center of the cylinder, a physically meaningful 3-parametric trial function is used to determine the ground state energy E of the system. This trial function incorporates the exact symmetries and key limiting behaviors of the problem explicitly. In particular, it does not treat the Coulomb potential nor the magnetic interaction as a perturbation. The novel inclusion of a variational cut-off factor \(\big (1 - \big (\frac{\rho }{\rho _0}\big )^\nu \big )\), \(\nu \ge 1\), appears to represent a significant improvement compared to the non-variational cut-off factors commonly employed in the literature. The dependence of the total energy \(E=E(\rho _0,\,B)\) and the binding energy \(E_b=E_b(\rho _0,\,B)\) on the cavity radius \(\rho _0 \in [0.8,\,5] \,\)a.u. and the magnetic field strength \(B\in [0.0,\,1.0]\,\)a.u. is presented in detail. The expectation values \(\langle \rho \rangle \) and \(\langle |z| \rangle \), and the Shannon entropy in position space are computed to provide additional insights into the system’s localization. A brief discussion is provided comparing the 2D and 3D cases as well.
期刊介绍:
The journal Few-Body Systems presents original research work – experimental, theoretical and computational – investigating the behavior of any classical or quantum system consisting of a small number of well-defined constituent structures. The focus is on the research methods, properties, and results characteristic of few-body systems. Examples of few-body systems range from few-quark states, light nuclear and hadronic systems; few-electron atomic systems and small molecules; and specific systems in condensed matter and surface physics (such as quantum dots and highly correlated trapped systems), up to and including large-scale celestial structures.
Systems for which an equivalent one-body description is available or can be designed, and large systems for which specific many-body methods are needed are outside the scope of the journal.
The journal is devoted to the publication of all aspects of few-body systems research and applications. While concentrating on few-body systems well-suited to rigorous solutions, the journal also encourages interdisciplinary contributions that foster common approaches and insights, introduce and benchmark the use of novel tools (e.g. machine learning) and develop relevant applications (e.g. few-body aspects in quantum technologies).