Introduction: When Spin Meets Motion
Spin-orbit coupling is the interaction between an electron's spin and its orbital motion. The moving electron sees the nuclear electric field as a magnetic field that interacts with its magnetic moment.
Physical Picture
In the electron's rest frame, the nucleus orbits the electron, creating a magnetic field:
\[\vec{B} \propto \vec{L}\]The electron's spin magnetic moment couples to this:
\[H_{SO} = \xi(r)\vec{L}\cdot\vec{S}\]Effect on Energy
Using \(\vec{J} = \vec{L} + \vec{S}\), we have \(\vec{L}\cdot\vec{S} = \frac{1}{2}(J^2 - L^2 - S^2)\)
\[\langle\vec{L}\cdot\vec{S}\rangle = \frac{\hbar^2}{2}[j(j+1) - l(l+1) - s(s+1)]\]Energy Splitting
For hydrogen:
- \(j = l + 1/2\): energy increases
- \(j = l - 1/2\): energy decreases
Splitting proportional to \(l\)—s states (\(l = 0\)) have no spin-orbit splitting.
The Quantum Connection
Spin-orbit coupling is crucial for understanding atomic spectra, magnetic materials, and spintronics. In heavy atoms, it becomes large (proportional to \(Z^4\)), causing significant effects like the splitting of sodium's yellow line into a doublet.