Symmetry of diatomic molecules

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irreducible representations from the character table
of the symmetry group of the molecule. Among all the molecular symmetries, diatomic molecules show some distinct features and they are relatively easier to analyze.

Symmetry and group theory

The physical laws governing a system is generally written as a relation (equations, differential equations, integral equations etc.). An operation on the ingredients of this relation, which keeps the form of the relations invariant is called a symmetry transformation or a symmetry of the system.

  • These symmetry operations can involve external or internal co-ordinates; giving rise to geometrical or internal symmetries.
  • These symmetry operations can be global or local; giving rise to global or gauge symmetries.
  • These symmetry operations can be discrete or continuous.

Symmetry is a fundamentally important concept in quantum mechanics. It can predict conserved quantities and provide quantum numbers. It can predict degeneracies of eigenstates and gives insights about the matrix elements of the Hamiltonian without calculating them. Rather than looking into individual symmetries, it is sometimes more convenient to look into the general relations between the symmetries. It turns out that Group theory is the most efficient way of doing this.

Groups

group is a mathematical structure (usually denoted in the form (G,*)) consisting of a set G and a binary operation (sometimes loosely called 'multiplication'), satisfying the following properties:

  1. closure: For every pair of elements , the product .
  2. associativity: For every x and y and z in G, both (x*y)*z and x*(y*z) result with the same element in G  (in symbols, ).
  3. existence of identity: There must be an element (say e ) in G such that product any element of G with e make no change to the element (in symbols,  ).
  4. existence of inverse: For each element ( x ) in G, there must be an element y in G such that product of x and y is the identity element e  (in symbols, for each such that ).
  • In addition to the above four, if it so happens that ,, i.e., the operation in commutative, then the group is called an abelian group. Otherwise it is called a non-abelian group.

Groups, symmetry and conservation