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  2. Spin–orbit interaction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spinorbit_interaction

    For rare-earth ions the spinorbit interactions are much stronger than the crystal electric field (CEF) interactions. [9] The strong spinorbit coupling makes J a relatively good quantum number, because the first excited multiplet is at least ~130 meV (1500 K) above the primary multiplet. The result is that filling it at room temperature ...

  3. Fine structure - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fine_structure

    The fine structure energy corrections can be obtained by using perturbation theory.To perform this calculation one must add three corrective terms to the Hamiltonian: the leading order relativistic correction to the kinetic energy, the correction due to the spinorbit coupling, and the Darwin term coming from the quantum fluctuating motion or zitterbewegung of the electron.

  4. Dresselhaus effect - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dresselhaus_effect

    Spinorbit interaction is a relativistic coupling between the electric field produced by an ion-core and the resulting dipole moment arising from the relative motion of the electron, and its intrinsic magnetic dipole proportional to the electron spin. In an atom, the coupling weakly splits an orbital energy state into two states: one state ...

  5. Term symbol - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Term_symbol

    The usual atomic term symbols assume LS coupling (also known as Russell–Saunders coupling), in which the atom's total spin quantum number S and the total orbital angular momentum quantum number L are "good quantum numbers". (Russell–Saunders coupling is named after Henry Norris Russell and Frederick Albert Saunders, who described it in 1925 [2]

  6. Rashba effect - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rashba_effect

    The Rashba spin-orbit coupling is typical for systems with uniaxial symmetry, e.g., for hexagonal crystals of CdS and CdSe for which it was originally found [20] and perovskites, and also for heterostructures where it develops as a result of a symmetry breaking field in the direction perpendicular to the 2D surface. [2]

  7. Angular momentum coupling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Angular_momentum_coupling

    In atomic physics, spinorbit coupling, also known as spin-pairing, describes a weak magnetic interaction, or coupling, of the particle spin and the orbital motion of this particle, e.g. the electron spin and its motion around an atomic nucleus. One of its effects is to separate the energy of internal states of the atom, e.g. spin-aligned and ...

  8. Zeeman effect - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zeeman_effect

    Fine-structure splitting occurs even in the absence of a magnetic field, as it is due to spinorbit coupling. Depicted on the right is the additional Zeeman splitting, which occurs in the presence of magnetic fields.

  9. Intersystem crossing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intersystem_crossing

    As the spin/orbital interactions in such molecules are substantial and a change in spin is thus more favourable, intersystem crossing is most common in heavy-atom molecules (e.g. those containing iodine or bromine). This process is called "spin-orbit coupling". Simply-stated, it involves coupling of the electron spin with the orbital angular ...