The Pauli exclusion principle states that no two identical fermions (particles with spin ) can occupy the same state.
The principle is a consequence of the postulate that the wavefunction of a system of fermions is antisymmetric with respect to label exchange, i.e. the wavefunction changes sign when the labels are exchanged.
The identical property of particles is fulfilled by the linear combinations:
where the labels 1 and 2 denote the first particle and second particle respectively, denotes particle in the state and there is equal probability of the wavefunction collapsing to and upon measurement.
Question
Show that is symmetric with respect to label exchange, while is antisymmetric with respect to label exchange.
Answer
Exchanging the labels of and ,
Since the wavefunction of a system of fermions is antisymmetric with respect to label exchange, it must be expressed by
When , the wavefunction , which contradicts the proposition that an eigenfunction is a non-zero function. Therefore, no two identical fermions can occupy the same state.
If the system is an atom, the total wavefunction (spatial + spin) describing two identical electrons () is
is the composite spatial wavefunction of the system, where is a one-electron spatial wavefunction (also known as hydrogenic wavefunction). is the composite spin wavefunction of the system and is explicitly given by eq222 through eq225. Since must be antisymmetric with respect to label exchange
When , and only is non-zero. Since refers to the singlet state (i.e. a state with anti-parallel spins, where ), no two identical electrons in an atom can have the same set of quantum numbers. This is consistent with the general statement that no two identical fermions can occupy the same state because a distinct quantum state of an atom is characterised by a particular set of quantum numbers, e.g. , , and .