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Semi-Relativistic QM clarifies Bound-Free Transtns?


Widdekind

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Q: In classical QM, free particles have positive energy & frequency (plane waves), whilst bound particles have negative energy & frequency (Hydrogen wave functions). Is this transition, from positive to negative frequency, significant (e.g., given that anti-matter has inverted frequencies) ??

 

A (??): No. Technically, the classical (scalar) Schrodinger Wave Equation (SWE) is the classical limit, of the (scalar) Klein-Gordon Wave Equation (KGWE), which incorporates the rest-mass-energy of the quantum 'particles'. Accounting for that rest-mass-energy, the SWE would be modified as follows:

 

[math]\hat{E} \Psi = \hat{H} \Psi \; \; \; \rightarrow \; \; \; \hat{E} \Psi = \left( \hat{H} + m c^2 \right) \Psi[/math]

Now, it can be shown, by simple substitution, that the addition of a spatially uniform & constant potential energy (V), to the Hamiltonian, multiplies the wave function by a corresponding time-varying phase factor (e-i V t / h). And, mathematically, one can consider the 'particle' rest-mass-energy as precisely such a spatially uniform & constant potential energy (V = m c2)*. Thus, when one accounts for the rest-mass-energy, the 'particle' frequency increases markedly, to a "new baseline", centered around the rest-mass-frequency, which is that corresponding, and complementary, to the 'particle' Compton Wavelength (h f = h c / l = m c2).

 

*
Could considering a quantum 'particle' rest-mass-energy, as a spatially constant & uniform potential energy, correspond to the Higgs field (interaction with which supposedly gives mass to particles) ???

For example, for an electron, m c2 = 511 KeV, so that the mere transition, from a free state, to a Hydrogen 1S state (say), with E = -13.7 eV, makes little "dent" in the electron's "hyper-fast" phase frequency. Indeed, the lowest energy, 1S, Hydrogenic bound states, for the first (and, hence, unscreened) electrons added to a bare nucleus, having Z protons, is - Z2 x 13.7 eV. Since an electron's rest-mass-energy is nearly 40,000 times larger (m c2 / E0 = 37300), than the (magnitude of) the Hydrogen 1S state's binding energy, one would need an ultra-trans-uranic nucleus, with nearly 200 protons (> 193), to create electro-static potential wells deep enough to actually "invert" the electron's phase-frequency*.

 

*
The largest naturally occurring elements have ~
100
protons. One could construe such coincidences (
200
roughly equals, but safely exceeds,
100
) as an argument for "fine tuning" [
cf
. Bernard Haisch.
Purpose-Guided Universe
].

Thus, using the standard, un-mass-energy-modified, SWE, amounts, mathematically, to a "Frequency Modulation (FM) signal analysis", where you "skim off" the "carrier frequency" (h f0 = m c2), and consider only the relative phase frequency (f - f0). So, simply b/c the relative phase frequency becomes negative, in bound states, need not imply that the electron's overall "actual" phase frequency has been "inverted", by becoming bound.

Edited by Widdekind
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