ACTIVITIES | PERCENTAGES |
---|---|
Four problem sets | 75% |
One take home exam | 25% |
Help support MIT OpenCourseWare by shopping at Amazon.com! MIT OpenCourseWare offers direct links to Amazon.com to purchase the books cited in this course. Click on the Amazon logo to the left of any citation and purchase the book from Amazon.com, and MIT OpenCourseWare will receive up to 10% of all purchases you make. Your support will enable MIT to continue offering open access to MIT courses. |
This class will be covered in twelve, 1.5 hour lectures. We will cover topics in time-dependent quantum mechanics, spectroscopy, and relaxation, with an emphasis on descriptions applicable to condensed phase problems and a statistical description of ensembles.
There will be 4 problem sets worth a total of 75% of the grade, which can and should be worked on together. A take-home exam will account for the remaining 25% of the grade. It will be distributed after the last lecture, and should not be discussed with your classmates.
ACTIVITIES | PERCENTAGES |
---|---|
Four problem sets | 75% |
One take home exam | 25% |
It is expected that students will maintain the highest standards of academic honesty.
With respect to homework assignments, it is expected that no student will turn in work that is not his or her own by copying the work of another student or by using the work or solutions from this course given in previous years. Discussion of approaches to solving the homework problems after attempting to work the problems independently, however, is permitted and encouraged.
It is expected that during a test or examination, a student will not:
Following a test or examination, a student will not try to deceive teachers or graders by misrepresenting or altering his or her previous work. In advance of a test or exam, a student will not knowingly obtain access to the exam questions.
Departures from the above standards are contrary to fundamental principles of MIT and of the larger scientific community. Such departures are considered serious offenses for which disciplinary penalties, including suspension and expulsion, can be imposed.
There is no required text for this class. The following books are strongly recommended:
Nitzan, Abraham. Chemical Dynamics in Condensed Phases. New York, NY: Oxford University Press, 2006. ISBN: 9780198529798.
This is a wonderful new book that thoroughly covers all topics that you might care to learn about for time-dependent quantum mechanics relevant to the condensed phase.
Schatz, George C., and Mark A. Ratner. Quantum Mechanics in Chemistry. Mineola, NY: Dover Publications, 2002. ISBN: 9780486420035.
This is an important book to have. It has the most overlap with the topics we will cover, uses a similar language and notation, and treats the problems at a similar level.
LEC # | TOPICS | KEY DATES |
---|---|---|
1 | Introduction; Time-independent Hamiltonian | |
2 | Time-development of state amplitudes: Resonant driving of a two-level system | |
3 | Quantum dynamics: The time-evolution operator | Problem set 1 due |
4 | The Schrodinger, Heisenberg, and interaction pictures | |
5 | Perturbation theory | Problem set 2 due |
6 | Fermi's golden rule | |
7 | Irreversible relaxation | |
8 | Interaction of light and matter | Problem set 3 due |
9 | Electric dipole Hamiltonian and absorption of light | |
10 | Time-correlation functions | |
11 | Absorption lineshape from time-correlation functions | |
12 | Electronic spectroscopy: The displaced harmonic oscillator model | Problem set 4 due |