Hartree atomic units


The Hartree atomic units are a system of natural units of measurement which is especially convenient for atomic physics and computational chemistry calculations. They are named after the physicist Douglas Hartree. In this system the numerical values of the following four fundamental physical constants are all unity by definition:
In Hartree atomic units, the speed of light is approximately atomic units of velocity. Atomic units are often abbreviated "a.u." or "au", not to be confused with the same abbreviation used also for astronomical units, arbitrary units, and absorbance units in other contexts.

Defining constants

Each unit in this system can be expressed as a product of powers of four physical constants without a multiplying constant. This makes it a coherent system of units, as well as making the numerical values of the defining constants in atomic units equal to unity.
NameSymbolValue in SI units
reduced Planck constant
elementary charge
Bohr radius
electron rest mass

Five symbols are commonly used as units in this system, only four of them being independent:
DimensionSymbolDefinition
action
electric charge
length
mass
energy

Units

Below are listed units that can be derived in the system. A few are given names, as indicated in the table.
Atomic unit ofNameExpressionValue in SI unitsOther equivalents
1st hyperpolarizability
2nd hyperpolarizability
action
charge
charge density
current
electric dipole moment
electric field,
electric field gradient
electric polarizability
electric potential
electric quadrupole moment
energyhartree,,
force,
lengthbohr,
magnetic dipole moment
magnetic flux density
magnetizability
mass
momentum
permittivity
pressure
time
velocity

Here,

Use and notation

Atomic units, like SI units, have a unit of mass, a unit of length, and so on. However, the use and notation is somewhat different from SI.
Suppose a particle with a mass of m has 3.4 times the mass of electron. The value of m can be written in three ways:
s retain their values in any system of units. Of note is the fine-structure constant, which appears in expressions as a consequence of the choice of units. For example, the numeric value of the speed of light, expressed in atomic units, has a value related to the fine structure constant.
NameSymbol/DefinitionValue in atomic units
speed of light
classical electron radius
reduced Compton wavelength
of the electron
Bohr radius
proton mass

Bohr model in atomic units

Atomic units are chosen to reflect the properties of electrons in atoms. This is particularly clear from the classical Bohr model of the hydrogen atom in its ground state. The ground state electron orbiting the hydrogen nucleus has :
The Schrödinger equation for an electron in SI units is
The same equation in atomic units is
For the special case of the electron around a hydrogen atom, the Hamiltonian in SI units is:
while atomic units transform the preceding equation into

Comparison with Planck units

Both Planck units and atomic units are derived from certain fundamental properties of the physical world, and have little anthropocentric arbitrariness, but do still involve some arbitrary choices in terms of the defining constants. Atomic units were designed for atomic-scale calculations in the present-day universe, while Planck units are more suitable for quantum gravity and early-universe cosmology. Both atomic units and Planck units normalize the reduced Planck constant. Beyond this, Planck units normalize to 1 the two fundamental constants of general relativity and cosmology: the gravitational constant and the speed of light in vacuum,. Atomic units, by contrast, normalize to 1 the mass and charge of the electron, and, as a result, the speed of light in atomic units is a large value,. The orbital velocity of an electron around a small atom is of the order of 1 in atomic units, so the discrepancy between the velocity units in the two systems reflects the fact that electrons orbit small atoms by around 2 orders of magnitude more slowly than the speed of light.
There are much larger differences for some other units. For example, the unit of mass in atomic units is the mass of an electron, while the unit of mass in Planck units is the Planck mass, a mass so large that if a single particle had that much mass it might collapse into a black hole. The Planck unit of mass is 22 orders of magnitude larger than the atomic unit of mass. Similarly, there are many orders of magnitude separating the Planck units of energy and length from the corresponding atomic units.