Publication | Open Access
Hydrogen Atoms under Magnification: Direct Observation of the Nodal Structure of Stark States
143
Citations
24
References
2013
Year
EngineeringParabolic CoordinatesMicroscopyMagnetic ResonanceElectron DiffractionChemistrySpectra-structure CorrelationQuantum EngineeringElectron MicroscopyMicroscopy MethodDirect ObservationStark HamiltonianUltracold AtomQuantum MatterMolecular PhysicsQuantum OpticsMacroscopic DistanceQuantum SciencePhysicsAtomic PhysicsPhysical ChemistryHydrogenQuantum ChemistryHydrogen AtomsNanophysicsHydrogen TransitionNatural SciencesCondensed Matter PhysicsApplied PhysicsHydrogen BondDynamic Nuclear PolarizationElectron MicroscopeStark States
To describe the microscopic properties of matter, quantum mechanics uses wave functions, whose structure and time dependence is governed by the Schrödinger equation. In atoms the charge distributions described by the wave function are rarely observed. The hydrogen atom is unique, since it only has one electron and, in a dc electric field, the Stark Hamiltonian is exactly separable in terms of parabolic coordinates (η, ξ, φ). As a result, the microscopic wave function along the ξ coordinate that exists in the vicinity of the atom, and the projection of the continuum wave function measured at a macroscopic distance, share the same nodal structure. In this Letter, we report photoionization microscopy experiments where this nodal structure is directly observed. The experiments provide a validation of theoretical predictions that have been made over the last three decades.
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