Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 July 2011
The origin of the new quantum mechanics was an epoch-making memoir by Werner Heisenberg which contained the new concept which was to lead to the phenomenal developments of quantum mechanics of the past two years. Up to this time the quantum theory (the ‘older’ quantum theory) postulated the existence of stationary states of the atom calculated by the use of the classical mechanics and selected by the use of quantum conditions satisfied by the action variables of that theory. In the new mechanics the equations have the same form as in the classical theory, but the variables no longer satisfy the commutative law of multiplication, that is, xy is not in general equal to yx; the quantum conditions of the older theory are replaced by equations which enable the difference xy – yx to be calculated; these equations involve Planck's constant h.
For some years before 1925, Sommerfeld, Heisenberg, Landé and Pauli had been grappling with the complex problem of the multiplets and their Zeeman separations. By the use of a system of quantum numbers l, s, j connected with the respective angular momenta of the series electron, the core, and the whole atom, they had given a qualitative account of the multiplets of the alkalis, alkaline earths, etc., the work culminating in a very general empirical formula—the g-formula of Landé—which enabled the Zeeman separations of a multiplet to be worked out quantitatively in terms of the quantum numbers l, s, j.
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