Lesson 333: Central Potentials and Spherical Symmetry

Introduction: The Power of Symmetry

A central potential depends only on distance from the origin: \(V = V(r)\). The resulting rotational symmetry means angular momentum is conserved and dictates the structure of solutions.

Conservation of Angular Momentum

For central \(V(r)\):

\[[\hat{H}, \hat{L}^2] = 0, \quad [\hat{H}, \hat{L}_z] = 0\]

States can be labeled by energy, \(l\), and \(m\) simultaneously.

Structure of Solutions

\[\psi_{nlm}(r, \theta, \phi) = R_{nl}(r)Y_l^m(\theta, \phi)\]

Where:

Examples of Central Potentials

The Quantum Connection

All atoms have central potentials (to good approximation), so atomic physics is built on the mathematics of central forces. The \((2l + 1)\)-fold degeneracy of each \(l\) subshell comes from rotational symmetry. Electric and magnetic fields break this symmetry, splitting the levels.