Atomic units
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The atomic units, abbreviated a.u. is a set of units used in atomic calculations.[1][2] In the a.u. system any four of the five quantities charge e, mass me, action ℏ, length a0, and energy Eh may be taken as base quantities, and other quantities are derived. In particular, time is a derived quantity, ℏ/Eh. Because length is a basic unit, the speed of light is a measured quantity in a.u., c=1/α where the fine structure constant α = 1/137.035 999 11(46).
Units
Basic atomic units [2] | |||
---|---|---|---|
Name | Symbol | Quantity | Value in SI units |
elementary charge | e | charge | 1.602 176 53(14) × 10−19 C |
Bohr radius (bohr) | a0 | length | 0.529 177 2108(18) × 10−10 m |
electron mass | me | mass | 9.109 3826(16) × 10−31 kg |
Reduced Planck constant | ℏ | action | 1.054 571 68(18) × 10−34 Js |
Hartree energy (hartree) | Eh | energy | 4.359 744 17(75) × 10−18 J |
Derived atomic units [2] | |||
---|---|---|---|
Name | Symbol | Quantity | Value in SI units |
a.u. velocity | vB≡αc | velocity | 2.187 691 2633(73) × 106 m/s |
Reduced period of first Bohr orbit | ℏ/Eh | time | 2.418 884 326 505(16) × 10−17 s |
Here, c = speed of light and α = fine structure constant.
Notes
- ↑ For an introduction, see Gordon W. F. Drake (2006). “§1.2 Atomic units”, Springer handbook of atomic, molecular, and optical physics, Volume 1, 2nd ed. Springer, p. 6. ISBN 038720802X.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 Tabulated values from Barry N. Taylor (2008). International System of Units (SI), Revised 2008 ed. DIANE Publishing, Table 7, p.34. ISBN 1437915582.