ABSTRACT

The absorbed/emitted radiation will be treated classically, as a monochromatic plane wave, whereas the atomic system that can absorb/emit such radiation will be described quantum-mechanically. However, no incident radiation beam is needed, and the atom “falls down” after a certain time interval to the ground state without any external reason. In the spontaneous emission processes the emitting atom can be thought of as a classical oscillating dipole, whose amplitude decreases due to the energy loss through the radiation. If an ensemble of identical atoms is considered and if, for simplicity, each atom emits radiation with the same spectral shape and full width at half maximum, it is impossible to ascribe a definite spectral component with intensity to a definite atom. In this case, such a broadening is identical for all atoms in the ensemble. On the microscopic scale, absorption of radiation is reduced to the transitions between pairs of energy levels of a discrete atomic spectrum.