Thomas-Fermi theory
Fermi–Thomas theory
Sometimes called the
"statistical theory" ,
it was invented by
L.H. Thomas
and
E. Fermi
[a2],
shortly after
E. Schrödinger
invented his
quantum-mechanical wave equation, in order to approximately
describe the
electron density,
$\rho ( x )$,
$x \in \mathbf{R} ^ { 3 }$,
and the
ground state energy,
$E ( N )$
for a large atom or molecule with a large number,
$N$,
of electrons. Schrödinger's
equation, which would give the exact density and energy, cannot be
easily handled when
$N$
is large (cf. also
A starting point for the theory is the
Thomas–Fermi energy functional.
For a molecule with
$K$
nuclei of charges
$Z_i > 0$
and locations
$R_{i} \in \mathbf{R} ^ { 3 }$
($i = 1 , \ldots , K$),
it is
\begin{equation} \tag{a1} \mathcal{E} ( \rho ) : = \end{equation}
\begin{equation*} := \frac { 3 } { 5 } \gamma \int _ { \mathbf R ^ { 3 } } \rho ( x ) ^ { 5 / 3 } d x - \int _ { \mathbf R ^ { 3 } } V ( x ) \rho ( x ) d x + \end{equation*}
\begin{equation*} +\frac { 1 } { 2 } \int _ { {\bf R} ^ { 3 } } \int _ { {\bf R} ^ { 3 } } \frac { \rho ( x ) \rho ( y ) } { | x - y | } d x d y + U \end{equation*}
in suitable units. Here,
\begin{equation*} V ( x ) = \sum _ { j = 1 } ^ { K } Z _ { j } | x - r _ { j } | ^ { - 1 }, \end{equation*}
\begin{equation*} U = \sum _ { 1 \leq i < j \leq K } Z _ { i } Z _ { j } | R _ { i } - R _ { j } | ^ { - 1 }, \end{equation*}
and
$\gamma = ( 3 \pi ^ { 2 } ) ^ { 2 / 3 }$.
The constraint on
$\rho$
is
$\rho ( x ) \geq 0$
and
$\int _ { \mathbf{R} ^ { 3 } } \rho = N$.
The functional
$\rho \rightarrow \mathcal{E} ( \rho )$
is convex (cf. also
Convex function (of a real variable)).
The justification for this functional is this:
The first term is roughly the minimum quantum-mechanical
kinetic energy of
$N$
electrons needed to produce an electron density
$\rho$.
The second term is the attractive interaction of the
$N$
electrons with the
$K$
nuclei, via the
Coulomb potential
$V$.
The third is approximately the electron-electron repulsive
energy.
$U$
is the nuclear-nuclear repulsion and is an important constant.
The
Thomas–Fermi energy
is defined to be
\begin{equation*} E ^ { \text{TF} } ( N ) = \operatorname { inf } \{ \mathcal{E} ( \rho ) : \rho \in L ^ { 5 / 3 } , \int \rho = N , \rho \geq 0 \}, \end{equation*}
i.e., the Thomas–Fermi energy and density are obtained by minimizing
${\cal E} ( \rho )$
with
$\rho \in L ^ { 5 / 3 } ( \mathbf{R} ^ { 3 } )$
and
$\int \rho = N$.
The
in this case called the
Thomas–Fermi equation,
is
\begin{equation} \tag{a2} \gamma \rho ( x ) ^ { 2 / 3 } = [ \Phi ( x ) - \mu ]_+ , \end{equation}
where
$[ a ] + = \operatorname { max } \{ 0 , a \}$,
$\mu$
is some constant
(a
Lagrange multiplier; cf.
and
$\Phi$
is the
Thomas–Fermi potential:
\begin{equation} \tag{a3} \Phi ( x ) = V ( x ) - \int _ { \mathbf{R} ^ { 3 } } | x - y | ^ { - 1 } \rho ( y ) d y. \end{equation}
The following essential mathematical facts about the
Thomas–Fermi equation were
established by
E.H. Lieb
and
B. Simon
(cf. also
[a3]):
1)
There is a density
$\rho _ { N } ^ { \operatorname {TF} }$
that minimizes
${\cal E} ( \rho )$
if and only if
$N \leq Z : = \sum _ { j = 1 } ^ { K } Z _ { j }$.
This
$\rho _ { N } ^ { \operatorname {TF} }$
is unique and it satisfies the Thomas–Fermi equation
(a2)
for some
$\mu \geq 0$.
Every positive solution,
$\rho$,
of
(a2)
is a minimizer of
(a1)
for
$N = \int \rho$.
If
$N > Z$,
then
$E ^ { \text{TF} } ( N ) = E ^ { \text{TF} } ( Z )$
and any minimizing sequence converges weakly in
$L ^ { 5 / 3 } ( \mathbf{R} ^ { 3 } )$
to
$\rho ^ { \operatorname {TF} } _{ Z }$.
2)
$\Phi ( x ) \geq 0$
for all
$x$.
(This need not be so for the real Schrödinger
$\rho$.)
3)
$\mu = \mu ( N )$
is a strictly monotonically decreasing function of
$N$
and
$\mu ( Z ) = 0$
(the
neutral case).
$\mu$
is the
chemical potential,
namely
\begin{equation*} \mu ( N ) = - \frac { \partial E ^ { \text{TF} } ( N ) } { \partial N }. \end{equation*}
$E ^ { \text{TF} } ( N )$
is a strictly convex, decreasing function of
$N$
for
$N \leq Z$
and
$E ^ { \text{TF} } ( N ) = E ^ { \text{TF} } ( Z )$
for
$N \geq Z$.
If
$N < Z$,
$\rho _ { N } ^ { \operatorname {TF} }$
has compact support.
When
$N = Z$,
(a2)
becomes
$\gamma \rho ^ { 2 / 3 } = \Phi$.
By applying the
$\Delta$
to both sides, one obtains
\begin{equation*} - \Delta \Phi ( x ) + 4 \pi \gamma ^ { - 3 / 2 } \Phi ( x ) ^ { 3 / 2 } = 4 \pi \sum _ { j = 1 } ^ { K } Z _ { j } \delta ( x - R _ { j } ), \end{equation*}
which is the form in which the Thomas–Fermi
equation is usually stated (but it
is valid only for
$N = Z$).
An important property of the solution is
Teller's theorem
(proved rigorously in
[a7]),
which implies that the
Thomas–Fermi molecule
is always unstable, i.e., for each
$N \leq Z$
there are
$K$
numbers
$N _ { j } \in ( 0 , Z _ { j } )$
with
$\sum _ { j } N _ { j } = N$
such that
\begin{equation} \tag{a4} E ^ { \operatorname{TF} } ( N ) > \sum _ { j = 1 } ^ { K } E _ { \operatorname{atom} } ^ { \operatorname{TF} } ( N _ { j } , Z _ { j } ), \end{equation}
where
$E _ { \operatorname{atom} } ^ { \operatorname{TF} } ( N _ { j } , Z _ { j } )$
is the Thomas–Fermi
energy with
$K = 1$,
$Z = Z_j$
and
$N = N_{j}$.
The presence of
$U$
in
(a1)
is crucial for this result. The inequality is strict. Not only does
$E ^ { \text{TF} }$
decrease when the nuclei are pulled infinitely far apart (which is
what
(a4)
says) but any dilation of the nuclear coordinates
($R _ { j } \rightarrow \text{l}R _ { j }$,
$\text{l} > 1$)
will decrease
$E ^ { \text{TF} }$
in the neutral case
(positivity of the pressure)
[a3],
[a1].
This theorem plays an important role in the
stability of matter.
An important question concerns the connection between
$E ^ { \text{TF} } ( N )$
and
$E ^ { \text{Q} } ( N )$,
the
ground state energy
(i.e., the infimum of the spectrum) of the
Schrödinger operator,
$H$,
it was meant to approximate.
\begin{equation*} H = - \sum _ { i = 1 } ^ { N } [ \Delta _ { i } + V ( x _ { i } ) ] + \sum _ { 1 \leq i < j \leq N } | x _ { i } - x _ { j } | ^ { - 1 } + U, \end{equation*}
which acts on the
anti-symmetric functions
$\wedge ^ { N } L ^ { 2 } ( \mathbf{R} ^ { 3 } ; \mathbf{C} ^ { 2 } )$
(i.e., functions of space and spin). It used to be believed that
$E ^ { \text{TF} }$
is asymptotically exact as
$N \rightarrow \infty$,
but this is not quite right;
$Z \rightarrow \infty$
is also needed.
Lieb
and
Simon
proved that if one fixes
$K$
and
$Z _ { j } / Z$
and sets
$R _ { j } = Z ^ { - 1 / 3 } R _ { j } ^ { 0 }$,
with fixed
$R _ { j } ^ { 0 } \in \mathbf{R} ^ { 3 }$,
and sets
$N = \lambda Z$,
with
$0 \leq \lambda < 1$,
then
\begin{equation} \tag{a5} \operatorname { lim } _ { Z \rightarrow \infty } \frac { E ^ { \text{TF} } ( \lambda Z ) } { E ^ { \text{Q} } ( \lambda Z ) } = 1. \end{equation}
In particular, a simple change of variables shows that
$E _ { \text{atom} } ^ { \text{TF} } ( \lambda , Z ) = Z ^ { 7 / 3 } E _ { \text{atom} } ^ { \text{TF} } ( \lambda , 1 )$
and hence the true energy of a large atom is asymptotically
proportional to
$Z ^ { 7 / 3 }$.
Likewise, there is a well-defined sense in which the
quantum-mechanical density converges to
$\rho _ { N } ^ { \operatorname {TF} }$
(cf.
[a7]).
The Thomas–Fermi density for an atom located at
$R = 0$,
which is spherically symmetric, scales as
\begin{equation*} \rho _ { \text { atom } } ^ { \text {TF} } ( x ; N = \lambda Z , Z ) = \end{equation*}
\begin{equation*} = Z ^ { 2 } \rho _ { \text { atom } } ^ { \operatorname{TF} } ( Z ^ { 1 / 3 } x ; N = \lambda , Z = 1 ). \end{equation*}
Thus, a large atom (i.e., large
$Z$)
is smaller than a
$Z = 1$
atom by a factor
$Z ^ { - 1 / 3 }$
in radius. Despite this seeming paradox, Thomas–Fermi
theory gives the correct
electron density in a real atom (so far as the bulk of the
electrons is concerned) as
$Z \rightarrow \infty$.
Another important fact is the
large-$| x |$
asymptotics of
$\rho _ { \text { atom } } ^ { \text{TF} }$
for a neutral atom. As
$| x | \rightarrow \infty$,
\begin{equation*} \rho _ { \text{atom} } ^ { \text{TF} } ( x , N = Z , Z ) \sim \gamma ^ { 3 } \left( \frac { 3 } { \pi } \right) ^ { 3 } | x | ^ { - 6 }, \end{equation*}
independent of
$Z$.
Again, this behaviour agrees with quantum mechanics — on a
length scale
$Z ^ { - 1 / 3 }$,
which is where the bulk of the electrons is to be found.
In light of the limit theorem
(a5),
Teller's theorem
can be understood as saying that, as
$Z \rightarrow \infty$,
the quantum-mechanical binding energy of a molecule is of lower order
in
$Z$
than the total ground state energy. Thus, Teller's theorem is
not a defect of Thomas–Fermi
theory (although it is sometimes interpreted that
way) but an important statement about the true quantum-mechanical
situation.
For finite
$Z$
one can show, using the
and the
Lieb–Oxford inequality
[a6],
that
$E ^ { \text{TF} } ( N )$,
with a modified
$\gamma$,
gives a lower bound to
$E ^ { \text{Q} } ( N )$.
Several
"improvements"
to Thomas–Fermi theory have been proposed, but none have a
fundamental significance in the sense of being
"exact"
in the
$Z \rightarrow \infty$
limit. The
von Weizsäcker correction
consists in adding a term
\begin{equation*} \text{(const)} \int _ { {\bf R} ^ { 3 } } | \nabla \sqrt { \rho ( x ) } | ^ { 2 } d x \end{equation*}
to
${\cal E} ( \rho )$.
This preserves the convexity of
${\cal E} ( \rho )$
and adds
$(\text{const})Z ^ { 2 }$
to
$E ^ { \text{TF} } ( N )$
when
$Z$
is large. It also has the effect that the range of
$N$
for which there is a minimizing
$\rho$
is extend from
$[ 0 , Z ]$
to
$[ 0 , Z + ( \text { const } ) K ]$.
Another correction, the
Dirac exchange energy,
is to add
\begin{equation*} - ( \text {const} ) \int _ { {\bf R} ^ { 3 } } \rho ( x ) ^ { 4 / 3 } d x \end{equation*}
to
${\cal E} ( \rho )$.
This spoils the convexity but not the range
$[ 0 , Z ]$
for which a
minimizing
$\rho$
exists, cf.
for both of these corrections.
When a uniform external magnetic field
$B$
is present, the operator
$- \Delta$
in
$H$
is replaced by
\begin{equation*} | i \nabla + A ( x ) | ^ { 2 } + \sigma . B ( x ), \end{equation*}
with
$\operatorname{curl}A = B$
and
$\sigma$
denoting the Pauli spin matrices (cf. also
This leads to a modified Thomas–Fermi theory
that is asymptotically exact as
$Z \rightarrow \infty$,
but the theory depends on the manner in which
$B$
varies with
$Z$.
There are five distinct regimes and theories:
$B \ll Z ^ { 4 / 3 }$,
$B \sim Z ^ { 4 / 3 }$,
$Z ^ { 4 / 3 } \ll B \ll Z ^ { 3 }$,
$B \sim Z ^ { 3 }$,
and
$B \gg Z ^ { 3 }$.
These
theories
[a8],
are relevant for
neutron stars.
Another class of Thomas–Fermi theories with
magnetic fields is relevant for electrons confined to
two-dimensional geometries
(quantum dots)
In this case there are three regimes. A convenient review
is
Still another modification of Thomas–Fermi theory
is its extension from a
theory of the ground states of atoms and molecules (which corresponds
to zero temperature) to a theory of positive temperature states of
large systems such as stars
(cf.
[a5],
[a14]).
References
[a1] |
R. Benguria, E.H. Lieb, "The positivity of the pressure in Thomas–Fermi theory" Comm. Math. Phys. , 63 (1978) pp. 193–218 ((Errata: 71 (1980), 94)) |
[a2] |
E. Fermi, "Un metodo statistico per la determinazione di alcune priorieta dell'atome" Rend. Accad. Naz. Lincei , 6 (1927) pp. 602–607 |
[a3] |
E.H. Lieb, "Thomas–Fermi and related theories of atoms and molecules" Rev. Mod. Phys. , 53 (1981) pp. 603–641 ((Errata: 54 (1982), 311)) |
[a4] |
E. Teller, "On the stability of molecules in Thomas–Fermi theory" Rev. Mod. Phys. , 34 (1962) pp. 627–631 |
[a5] |
J. Messer, "Temperature dependent Thomas–Fermi theory" , Lecture Notes Physics , 147 , Springer (1981) |
[a6] |
E.H. Lieb, S. Oxford, "An improved lower bound on the indirect Coulomb energy" Internat. J. Quant. Chem. , 19 (1981) pp. 427–439 |
[a7] |
E.H. Lieb, B. Simon, "The Thomas–Fermi theory of atoms, molecules and solids" Adv. Math. , 23 (1977) pp. 22–116 |
[a8] |
E.H. Lieb, J.P. Solovej, J. Yngvason, "Asymptotics of heavy atoms in high magnetic fields: I. lowest Landau band region" Commun. Pure Appl. Math. , 47 (1994) pp. 513–591 |
[a9] |
E.H. Lieb, J.P. Solovej, J. Yngvason, "Asymptotics of heavy atoms in high magnetic fields: II. semiclassical regions" Comm. Math. Phys. , 161 (1994) pp. 77–124 |
[a10] |
E.H. Lieb, J.P. Solovej, J. Yngvason, "Ground states of large quantum dots in magnetic fields" Phys. Rev. B , 51 (1995) pp. 10646–10665 |
[a11] |
E.H. Lieb, J.P. Solovej, J. Yngvason, "Asymptotics of natural and artificial atoms in strong magnetic fields" W. Thirring (ed.) , The stability of matter: from atoms to stars, selecta of E.H. Lieb , Springer (1997) pp. 145–167 (Edition: Second) |
[a12] |
E.H. Lieb, W. Thirring, "Inequalities for the moments of the eigenvalues of the Schrödinger Hamiltonian and their relation to Sobolev inequalities" E. Lieb (ed.) B. Simon (ed.) A. Wightman (ed.) , Studies in Mathematical Physics: Essays in Honor of Valentine Bargmann , Princeton Univ. Press (1976) pp. 269–303 ((See also: W. Thirring (ed.), The stability of matter: from the atoms to stars, Selecta of E.H. Lieb, Springer, 1977)) |
[a13] |
L.H. Thomas, "The calculation of atomic fields" Proc. Cambridge Philos. Soc. , 23 (1927) pp. 542–548 |
[a14] |
W. Thirring, "A course in mathematical physics" , 4 , Springer (1983) pp. 209–277 |
Elliott H. Lieb
Copyright to this article is held by Elliott Lieb.
Thomas-Fermi theory. Encyclopedia of Mathematics. URL: http://encyclopediaofmath.org/index.php?title=Thomas-Fermi_theory&oldid=23073