6 research outputs found
The exact Darwin Lagrangian
Darwin (1920) noted that when radiation can be neglected it should be
possible to eliminate the radiation degrees-of-freedom from the action of
classical electrodynamics and keep the discrete particle degrees-of-freedom
only. Darwin derived his well known Lagrangian by series expansion in
keeping terms up to order . Since radiation is due to acceleration the
assumption of low speed should not be necessary. A Lagrangian is suggested that
neglects radiation without assuming low speed. It cures deficiencies of the
Darwin Lagrangian in the ultra-relativistic regime.Comment: 2.5 pages, no figure
The Semi-Classical Relativistic Darwin Potential for Spinning Particles in the Rest-Frame Instant Form: 2-Body Bound States with Spin 1/2 Constituents
In the semiclassical approximation of Grassmann-valued electric charges for
regularizing Coulomb self-energies, we extract the unique
acceleration-independent interaction hidden in any Lienard-Wiechert solution
for the system of N positive-energy spinning particles plus the electromagnetic
field in the radiation gauge of the rest-frame instant form. With the help of a
semiclassical Foldy-Wouthuysen transformation, this allows us to find the
relativistic semiclassical Darwin potential. In the 2-body case the
quantization of the lowest order reproduces exactly the results from the
reduction of the Bethe-Salpeter equation.Comment: 102 pages, revtex fil
A derivation of the Breit equation from Barut's covariant formulation of electrodynamics in terms of direct interactions
We study Barut's covariant equations describing the electromagnetic
interactions between N spin-1/2 particles. In the covariant formulation each
particle is described by a Dirac spinor. It is assumed that the interactions
between the particles are not mediated by a bosonic field (direct
interactions). Within this formulation, using the Lagrangian formalism, we
derive the approximate (semirelativistic) Breit equation for two interacting
spin-1/2 particles
Reduction of the two-body dynamics to a one-body description in classical electrodynamics
We discuss the mapping of the conservative part of two-body electrodynamics
onto that of a test charged particle moving in some external electromagnetic
field, taking into account recoil effects and relativistic corrections up to
second post-Coulombian order. Unlike the results recently obtained in general
relativity, we find that in classical electrodynamics it is not possible to
implement the matching without introducing external parameters in the effective
electromagnetic field. Relaxing the assumption that the effective test particle
moves in a flat spacetime provides a feasible way out.Comment: 20 pages, revtex; minor change