A configuration state function (CSF), is a symmetry-adapted linear combination of
Slater determinants. It is constructed to have the same quantum numbers as the
wavefunction, \Psi, of the system being studied. In the method of
configuration interaction, the wavefunction can be expressed as a linear combination of CSFs, that is in the form \Psi = \sum_k c_k \psi_k where \psi_k denotes the set of CSFs. The coefficients, c_k, are found by using the expansion of \Psi to compute a
Hamiltonian matrix. When this is diagonalized, the eigenvectors are chosen as the expansion coefficients. CSFs rather than just Slater determinants can also be used as a basis in
multi-configurational self-consistent field computations. In atomic structure, a CSF is an eigenstate of • the square of the
angular momentum operator, \hat{L}^2 • the z-projection of angular momentum \hat {L}_z • the square of the
spin operator \hat{S}^2 • the z-projection of the spin operator \hat {S}_z In linear molecules, \hat{L}^2 does not commute with the Hamiltonian for the system and therefore CSFs are not eigenstates of \hat{L}^2 . However, the z-projection of angular momentum is still a
good quantum number and CSFs are constructed to be eigenstates of \hat{L}_z, \hat{S}^2 and \hat {S}_z . In non-linear (which implies polyatomic) molecules, neither \hat{L}^2 nor \hat{L}_z commutes with the Hamiltonian. The CSFs are constructed to have the spatial transformation properties of one of the irreducible representations of the point group to which the nuclear framework belongs. This is because the Hamiltonian operator transforms in the same way. \hat{S}^2 and \hat {S}_z are still valid quantum numbers and CSFs are built to be eigenfunctions of these operators. ==From configurations to configuration state functions==