Due to decay, an unstable quantum-mechanical system cannot be in the eigenstate of the Hamiltonian. Effectively, this means that the system is described by a wave-packet which ranges over a distribution of energies (or frequencies, as in the field of spectroscopy). In the simplest model of an exponential decay, the distribution of energies is given by so called Breit-Wigner distribution (and to some extent this is true for most short-living metastable system, e.g. resonances in high energy physics).
Given some quantities and of the dimension of energy the Breit-Wigner energy distribution
which should be in principle damped all the way to from some energy as the spectrum of any Hamiltonian must be bounded below. The plot of the Breit-Wigner curve as seen in spectroscopy is often called Breit-Wigner curve.
Various effects in nature lead to modifed, asymmetric and other spectral curves to which the Breit-Wigner is merely the crudest approximation.
Assymetric line shapes in autoionization and Rydberg atoms are studied in the famous
Last revised on October 6, 2016 at 19:09:09. See the history of this page for a list of all contributions to it.