Consider a two-particle system represented by the following diagram,R1(123) R3(168)
where
,
and
represent distances between the two particles along the three Cartesian axes, where
, with
and
the position vectors of particles 1 and 2, respectively.
The central potential
is a function of
, rather than a function of the individual Cartesian components. Assuming that such function defines the interaction between the two particles, the Hamiltonian of the system has the form,
Changing variables
, and
, by the center-of-mass coordinates
, and the relative coordinates,
, where,
depends on R depends on r
Therefore, each one of the parts of the Hamiltonian have to be equal to a constant,
![]() |
(38) |
with |
(39) |
According to Eq. (39), the energy
is found by solving the equation,
![]() |
(40) |
Eqs. (38) and (39) have separated the problem of two particles interacting according to a central potential
into two separate one-particle problems that include:
(1) The translational motion of the entire system of mass M.
(2) The relative (e.g., internal) motion.
These results apply to any problem described by a central potential (e.g., the hydrogen atom, the two-particle rigid rotor, and the isotropic multidimensional harmonic-oscillator).
Consider Eq. (40), with
, and
a spherically-symmetric potential, i.e., a function of the distance
. It is natural to work in spherical coordinates.
Exercise 29:
Prove that the Laplacian
can written in spherical coordinates as follows,
where
Conclusion: A system described by a central-potential has eigenfunctions that are common to the operators
,
and
:
Substituting these results into Eq. (40) we obtain,
Since the eigenfunctions of
are spherical harmonics
, we consider the solution,
![]() |
(41) |