Parity of spatial wavefunctions

Parity of spatial wavefunctions is a property describing how a wavefunction behaves under inversion, being classified as even (g) if it remains unchanged or odd (u) if it changes sign.

 

Consider the hydrogenic wavefunction , where and  are the radial and angular wavefunctions respectively. In spherical coordinates, an inversion () through the origin results in:

    • (the radius is always positive)
    • (polar angle reflects across the -plane)
    • (azimuthal angle rotates by half a circle)

Therefore,

Since ,

are the associated Legendre polynomials given by , or equivalently, , where . So,

 

Question

Prove by induction the expression .

Answer

For , let . Applying the chain rule, . So,  and the expression is valid. Assume the expression holds for some , i.e. . Then for ,

By mathematical induction, .

 

It follows that

and

Hence, the parity of hydrogenic wavefunctions is given by , where is even if is even and odd if is odd. For an -electron atom with a wavefunction expressed as a product of hydrogenic orbitals , its parity is

because .

So, the wavefunction is even if is even and odd if is odd.

If the multielectron wavefunction is properly antisymmetrised, such as in a Slater determinant, each term in the determinant is a permutation of the same set of one-electon orbitals. Since parity depends only on the set of occupied orbitals and not their ordering, every permutation acquires the same overall factor . Therefore, the parity of the Slater determinant remains .

 

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