Feshbach–Fano partitioning

Feshbach–Fano partitioning

In quantum mechanics, and in particular in scattering theory, the Feshbach–Fano method, named after Herman Feshbach and Ugo Fano, separates (partitions) the resonant and the background components of the wave function and therefore of the associated quantities like cross sections or phase shift. This approach allows us to define rigorously the concept of resonance in quantum mechanics.

In general, the partitioning formalism is based on the definition of two complementary projectors "P" and "Q" such that

:"P" + "Q" = 1.

The subspaces onto which "P" and "Q" project are sets of states obeying the continuum and the bound state boundary conditions respectively. "P" and "Q" are interpreted as the projectors on the background and the resonant subspaces respectively.

The projectors "P" and "Q" are not defined within the Feshbach–Fano method. This is its major power as well as its major weakness. On the one hand, this makes the method very general and, on the other hand, it introduces some arbitrariness which is difficult to control. Some authors define first the P space as an approximation to the background scattering but most authors define first the "Q" space as an approximation to the resonance. This step relies always on some physical intuition which is not easy to quantify. In practice "P" or "Q" should be chosen such that the resulting background scattering phase or cross-section is slowly depending on the scattering energy in the neighbourhood of the resonances (this is the so-called flat continuum hypothesis). If one succeeds in translating the flat continuum hypothesis in a mathematical form, it is possible to generate a set of equations defining "P" and "Q" on a less arbitrary ground.

The aim of the Feshbach–Fano method is to solve the Schrödinger equation governing a scattering process (defined by the Hamiltonian "H") in two steps: First by solving the scattering problem ruled by the background Hamiltonian "PHP". It is often supposed that the solution of this problem is trivial or at least fulfilling some standard hypotheses which allow to skip its full resolution. Second by solving the resonant scattering problem corresponding to the effective complex (energy dependent) Hamiltonian

:H_mathrm{eff} (E) = QHQ + lim_{varepsilon o 0} QHP{1 over (E + i varepsilon -PHP)}PHQ = QHQ + Delta(E) - i Gamma(E)/2,

whose dimension is equal to the number of interacting resonances and depends parametrically on the scattering energy "E". The resonance parameters E_mathrm{res} and Gamma_mathrm{res} are obtained by solving the so-called implicit equation

:det [H_mathrm{eff}(z)-z] =0,

for "z" in the lower complex plane. The solution

:z_mathrm{res} = E_mathrm{res}-iGamma_mathrm{res}

is the resonance pole. If z_mathrm{res} is close to the real axis it gives rise to a Breit-Wigner or a Fano profile in the corresponding cross section. Both resulting "T" matrices have to be added in order to obtain the "T" matrix corresponding to the full scattering problem :

:T_mathrm{tot}=T_mathrm{background}+T_mathrm{resonances}.


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно сделать НИР?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Fano resonance — In physics, a Fano resonance, in contrast with a Breit–Wigner resonance, is a resonance for which the corresponding profile in the cross section has the so called Fano shape, i.e. it can be fitted with a function proportional to::{(q Gamma… …   Wikipedia

  • Herman Feshbach — (born in 1917 in New York City mdash; died 22 December 2000 in Cambridge, Massachusetts) was an American physicist. He was an Institute Professor Emeritus of physics at MIT. Feshbach is best known for Feshbach resonance and for writing, with… …   Wikipedia

  • Ugo Fano — Infobox Scientist box width = 300px name = Ugo Fano image size = 300px caption = Ugo Fano (1912 2001). Photo taken in 1978. birth date = birth date|1912|7|28|mf=y birth place = Turin, Italy death date = death date and age|2001|2|13|1912|7|28|mf=y …   Wikipedia

  • Резонанс Фано — тип резонанса с асимметричным профилем, возникающего в результате интерференции двух волновых процессов. Природа интерферирующих процессов может быть самой различной, поэтому такой резонанс носит универсальный характер и появляется в различных… …   Википедия

  • Self-adjoint operator — In mathematics, on a finite dimensional inner product space, a self adjoint operator is one that is its own adjoint, or, equivalently, one whose matrix is Hermitian, where a Hermitian matrix is one which is equal to its own conjugate transpose.… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”