Optical activity in the Drude helix model
An old classical one-particle helix model for optical activity, first proposed by Drude, is reconsidered here. The quantum Drude model is very instructive because the optical activity can be calculated analytically without further approximations apart from the Rosenfeld long wavelength approximation...
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Zusammenfassung: | An old classical one-particle helix model for optical activity, first
proposed by Drude, is reconsidered here. The quantum Drude model is very
instructive because the optical activity can be calculated analytically without
further approximations apart from the Rosenfeld long wavelength approximation.
While it was generally believed that this model, when treated correctly, is
optically inactive, we show that it leads to optical activity when the motion
of the particle is quantum mechanically treated. We also find that optical
activity arises even in the classical regime at non-zero energy, while for zero
energy the model is inactive, in accordance with previous results. The model is
compared with other one-electron models and it is shown that its predicted
optical activity is qualitatively different from those of other one-electron
systems. The vanishing of optical activity in the classical zero-energy limit
for the Drude model is due to the localization of the particle at the
equilibrium position, whereas in the analogous model of a particle moving
freely on a helix without a definite equilibrium position, optical activity
does not vanish but the spectrum is rescaled. The model under study leads to
interesting predictions about the optical properties of e. g. helicene
derivatives. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.physics/0606189 |