Abstract

In this paper, a coherent superposition of angular-momentum states created by absorption of polarized light by molecules is analyzed. Attention is paid to the time evolution of wave packets representing the spatial orientation of the internuclear axis of a diatomic molecule. Two examples are considered in detail. Molecules absorbing light in a permanent magnetic field experiencing the Zeeman effect and molecules absorbing light in a permanent electric field experiencing the quadratic Stark effect. In a magnetic field, we have a wave packet that evolves in time exactly as a classical dipole oscillator in a permanent magnetic field (classical-physics picture of the Zeeman effect). In the second case, we have a wave packet that goes through periodical changes of shape of the packet with revivals of the initial shape. This is pure quantum behavior. The classical motion of angular momentum in an electric field in the case of a quadratic Stark effect is known to be a periodic. Solutions obtained for wave packet evolution are briefly compared with Rydberg-state coherent wave packets and harmonic-oscillator wave packets. Zeeman and Stark effects in small molecules continuously attract the attention of researchers, theoreticians, as well as experimentalists. These investigations allow us to obtain a deeper understanding of the interaction of molecules with stationary external fields and also can be used as a practical tool to measure different molecular characteristics, such as permanent electric or magnetic dipole moments, intramolecular perturbations, etc. It is worthwhile analyzing these effects as an evolution of wave packets. All this motivates a comparison of the quantum and classical picture of Zeeman and Stark effects in molecules.PACS No.: 33.55.Be

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