A similar parameter exists to relate the magnitude of the induced
dipole moment p of an individual
molecule to the local electric field
E that induced the dipole. This parameter is the
molecular polarizability (
α), and the dipole moment resulting from the local electric field
Elocal is given by: \mathbf{p} = \varepsilon_0\alpha \mathbf{E_{\text{local}}} This introduces a complication however, as locally the field can differ significantly from the overall applied field. We have: \mathbf{P} = N \mathbf{p} = N \varepsilon_0 \alpha \mathbf{E}_\text{local}, where
P is the polarization per unit volume, and
N is the number of molecules per unit volume contributing to the polarization. Thus, if the local electric field is parallel to the ambient electric field, we have: \chi_{\text{e}} \mathbf{E} = N \alpha \mathbf{E}_{\text{local}} Thus only if the local field equals the ambient field can we write: \chi_{\text{e}} = N \alpha. Otherwise, one should find a relation between the local and the macroscopic field. In some materials, the
Clausius–Mossotti relation holds and reads \frac{\chi_{\text{e}}}{3+\chi_{\text{e}}} = \frac{N \alpha}{3}.
Ambiguity in the definition The definition of the molecular polarizability depends on the author. In the above definition, \mathbf{p}=\varepsilon_0\alpha \mathbf{E_{\text{local}}}, p and E are in SI units and the molecular polarizability \alpha has the dimension of a volume (m3). Another definition would be to keep SI units and to integrate \varepsilon_0 into \alpha: \mathbf{p}=\alpha \mathbf{E_{\text{local}}}. In this second definition, the polarizability would have the SI unit of C.m2/V. Yet another definition exists where p and E are expressed in the cgs system and \alpha is still defined as \mathbf{p}=\alpha \mathbf{E_{\text{local}}}. Using the
cgs units gives \alpha the dimension of a volume, as in the first definition, but with a value that is 4\pi lower. == Nonlinear susceptibility ==