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- Long-range_potential abstract "Owing to the simplicity of the Morse potential (it only has three adjustable parameters), it is not used in modern spectroscopy. The MLR (Morse/Long-range) potential is a modern version of the Morse potential which has the correct theoretical long-range form of the potential naturally built into it. It was first introduced by professor Robert J. Le Roy of University of Waterloo, professor Nikesh S. Dattani of Oxford University and professor John A. Coxon of Dalhousie University in 2009 Since then it has been an important tool for spectroscopists to represent experimental data, verify measurements, and make predictions. It is particularly renowned for its extrapolation capability when data for certain regions of the potential are missing, its ability to predict energies with accuracy often better than the most sophisticated ab initio techniques, and its ability to determine precise empirical values for physical parameters such as the dissociation energy, equilibrium bond length, and long-range constants. Cases of particular note include: the c-state of Li2: where the MLR potential was successfully able to bridge a gap of more than 5000 cm−1 in experimental data. Two years later it was found that Dattani's MLR potential was able to successfully predict the energies in the middle of this gap, correctly within about 1 cm−1. The accuracy of these predictions was much better than the most sophisticated ab initio techniques at the time. the A-state of Li2: where Le Roy et al. constructed an MLR potential which determined the C3 value for atomic lithium to a higher-precision than any previously measured atomic oscillator strength, by an order of magnitude. This lithium oscillator strength is related to the radiative lifetime of atomic lithium and is used as a benchmark for atomic clocks and measurements of fundamental constants. It has been said that this work by Le Roy et al. was a \"landmark in diatomic spectral analysis\". the a-state of KLi: where an analytic global (MLR) potential was successfully built despite there only being a small amount of data near the top of the potential.↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 ↑ ↑ ↑ ↑ 5.0 5.1 ↑".
- Long-range_potential wikiPageID "41240510".
- Long-range_potential wikiPageLength "18261".
- Long-range_potential wikiPageOutDegree "30".
- Long-range_potential wikiPageRevisionID "688503121".
- Long-range_potential wikiPageWikiLink Ab_initio.
- Long-range_potential wikiPageWikiLink Bond-dissociation_energy.
- Long-range_potential wikiPageWikiLink Bond_length.
- Long-range_potential wikiPageWikiLink Caesium.
- Long-range_potential wikiPageWikiLink Calcium.
- Long-range_potential wikiPageWikiLink Category:Chemical_bonding.
- Long-range_potential wikiPageWikiLink Category:Computational_chemistry.
- Long-range_potential wikiPageWikiLink Category:Intermolecular_forces.
- Long-range_potential wikiPageWikiLink Category:Potentials.
- Long-range_potential wikiPageWikiLink Category:Theoretical_chemistry.
- Long-range_potential wikiPageWikiLink Category:Thermodynamics.
- Long-range_potential wikiPageWikiLink Dalhousie_University.
- Long-range_potential wikiPageWikiLink Dilithium.
- Long-range_potential wikiPageWikiLink KLi.
- Long-range_potential wikiPageWikiLink Lennard-Jones_potential.
- Long-range_potential wikiPageWikiLink Morse_potential.
- Long-range_potential wikiPageWikiLink Nitrogen.
- Long-range_potential wikiPageWikiLink Philip_M._Morse.
- Long-range_potential wikiPageWikiLink Robert_J._LeRoy.
- Long-range_potential wikiPageWikiLink University_of_Oxford.
- Long-range_potential wikiPageWikiLink University_of_Waterloo.
- Long-range_potential wikiPageWikiLinkText "Morse/Long-range Potential".
- Long-range_potential wikiPageWikiLinkText "Morse/Long-range potential".
- Long-range_potential wikiPageWikiLinkText "Morse/Long-range".
- Long-range_potential wikiPageWikiLinkText "potential energy curves".
- Long-range_potential wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Computational_physics.
- Long-range_potential wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Long-range_potential subject Category:Chemical_bonding.
- Long-range_potential subject Category:Computational_chemistry.
- Long-range_potential subject Category:Intermolecular_forces.
- Long-range_potential subject Category:Potentials.
- Long-range_potential subject Category:Theoretical_chemistry.
- Long-range_potential subject Category:Thermodynamics.
- Long-range_potential comment "Owing to the simplicity of the Morse potential (it only has three adjustable parameters), it is not used in modern spectroscopy. The MLR (Morse/Long-range) potential is a modern version of the Morse potential which has the correct theoretical long-range form of the potential naturally built into it. It was first introduced by professor Robert J. Le Roy of University of Waterloo, professor Nikesh S. Dattani of Oxford University and professor John A.".
- Long-range_potential label "Morse/Long-range potential".
- Long-range_potential sameAs Q17069852.
- Long-range_potential sameAs m.0zg7276.
- Long-range_potential sameAs Q17069852.
- Long-range_potential wasDerivedFrom Long-range_potential?oldid=688503121.
- Long-range_potential isPrimaryTopicOf Long-range_potential.