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This chapter discusses the spin degrees of freedom in an atom. We first review how atomic energy levels can be classified in terms of the electron spin and orbital angular momenta and how this couples to the nuclear spin. We then describe how atoms interact with each other, and how the spins affect this interaction. The effect of electromagnetic radiation on the energy levels of an atom is described, and the Hamiltonian for energy levels transitions . After briefly describing how the important phenomena of the ac Stark shift and Feshbach resonances occur, we then turn to describing how dissipative dynamics affect atomic systems. Specifically, we examine master equations for spontaneous emission and atom loss, and look at these can be solved. Finally, we consider an alternative framework for solving such open systems using the quantum jump method, which allows for a stochastic approach to solving the dynamics
This chapter covers the early years of quantum theory, a time of guesswork, inspired by problems presented by the properties of atoms and radiation and their interaction. Later, in the 1920s, this struggle led to the systematic theory known as quantum mechanics, the subject of Chapter 5. Quantum mechanics started with the problem of understanding radiation in thermal equilibrium at a non-zero temperature. It was not possible to make progress in applying quantum ideas to atoms without some understanding of what atoms are. The growth of this understanding began with the discovery of radioactivity.
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