On the symmetries of molecular reorientation processes in liquids
- 1 April 1977
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Molecular Physics
- Vol. 33 (4) , 1051-1061
- https://doi.org/10.1080/00268977700100931
Abstract
In this paper an irreducible expansion of the self and distinct part of the conditional pair distribution function G(ΩA, ΩB, t) is derived. For the description of several experiments which probe molecular reorientation processes it is of advantage not to require the self part of G(ΩA, ΩB, t) to be invariant under molecular symmetry operations. The orientational time correlation functions, however, as directly measurable quantities must possess this invariance. It is shown how the totally symmetrical structure of the orientational time correlation functions imposes certain symmetries on the time functions of the irreducible expansion of G(ΩA, ΩB, t).Keywords
This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- Reorientation and Vibrational Relaxation as Line Broadening Factors in Vibrational SpectroscopyThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1972
- Invariant Expansion for Two-Body Correlations: Thermodynamic Functions, Scattering, and the Ornstein—Zernike EquationThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1972
- Analysis of Orientational Broadening of Raman Line ShapesThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1972
- Some Properties of Correlation Functions of Irreducible Tensor OperatorsPhysical Review B, 1969
- Correlation Functions for Molecular MotionPublished by Elsevier ,1968
- Scattering from Fluids of Nonspherical Molecules. I. X Rays and NeutronsThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1965
- Statistical Mechanics of Nonspherical MoleculesThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1963
- On the symmetries of spherical harmonicsPhilosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series A, Mathematical and Physical Sciences, 1963
- Theory of the Rotational Brownian Motion of a Free Rigid BodyPhysical Review B, 1960
- Species Classification and Rotational Energy Level Patterns of Non-Linear Triatomic MoleculesPhysical Review B, 1941