26 June 2022 to 1 July 2022
University of Santiago de Compostela
Europe/Madrid timezone

Changes in polarization dictate necessary approximations for modeling electronic de-excitation intensity: an application to X-ray emission

Not scheduled
20m
Facultad de Ciencias de la Comunicación (University of Santiago de Compostela)

Facultad de Ciencias de la Comunicación

University of Santiago de Compostela

Campus Norte, Av. de Castelao, s/n, 15782 Santiago de Compostela, Spain

Speakers

Nicole Njinang (The University of Yaounde I)Dr Sidrex Boris Domguia Gatchuessi (The University of Yaounde I)

Description

We systematically investigate the underlying relations among different levels of approximation for simulating electronic de-excitations, with a focus on modeling X-ray emission spectroscopy (XES). Using Fermi's golden rule and explicit modeling of the initial, core-excited state and the final, valence-hole state, we show that XES can be accurately modeled by using orbital optimization for the various final states within a Slater-determinant framework. However, in this paper, we introduce a much cheaper approach reliant only on a single self-consistent field for all the final states, and show that it is typically sufficient. Further approximations reveal that these fundamentally many-body transitions can be reasonably approximated by projections of ground state orbitals, but that the ground state alone is insufficient. Furthermore, except in cases where the core-ionization induces negligible changes in polarization, linear-response approaches within the adiabatic approximation will have difficulty in accurately modeling de-excitation to the core level. Therefore, change in the net dipole moment of the valence electrons can serve as a metric for the validity of the linear-response approximation.

Topic Theory

Author

Nicole Njinang (The University of Yaounde I)

Co-author

Dr Sidrex Boris Domguia Gatchuessi (The University of Yaounde I)

Presentation materials

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