Abstract
Full Text
UDC 621.319.7
PHYSICS
I. M. TERNOV, V. G. BAGROV
MOTION OF A NEUTRAL FERMION POSSESSING AN ANOMALOUS MAGNETIC MOMENT IN AN ELECTRIC FIELD
(Presented by Academician N. N. Bogolyubov, 18 X 1965)
Let us consider the motion of a neutral Dirac particle with anomalous magnetic moment (\mu=-\mu_0) ((\mu_0>0)) in a static electric field having a component along the (z)-axis of the Cartesian coordinate system, (\mathcal E(z)). A solution of the Dirac equation (see ({}^{1}))
[
i\hbar \frac{\partial}{\partial t}\Psi=\hat{\mathcal H}\Psi
={c(\hat{\boldsymbol{\alpha}}\mathbf p)+\rho_3mc^2+\mu_0\rho_2\sigma_3\mathcal E}\Psi
\tag{1}
]
will be an eigenfunction of the Hamiltonian operator (\hat{\mathcal H}), as well as of the operators (\hat p_x) and (\hat p_y) that commute with it:
[
\hat{\mathcal H}\Psi=E\Psi;\qquad \hat p_x\Psi=\hbar k_1\Psi;\qquad \hat p_y\Psi=\hbar k_2\Psi .
\tag{2}
]
To characterize the spin states it is expedient to introduce the polarization-tensor operator (\hat\Lambda=\rho_3[\hat{\boldsymbol{\sigma}}\mathbf p]_3), which also commutes with the Hamiltonian and characterizes the projection of the spin onto the direction perpendicular to the external field and to the velocity:
[
\hat\Lambda\Psi=\hbar\lambda\zeta\Psi
\tag{3}
]
(for the transformation properties of this operator, see ({}^{2})). Taking (1), (2), and (3) into account, the wave function may be represented in the form
[
\Psi=e^{-icKt}\frac{e^{i(k_1x+k_2y)}}{\sqrt{L_1L_2}}
\begin{pmatrix}
f_1(z)\
i\zeta e^{i\varphi}f_1(z)\
if_2(z)\
\zeta e^{i\varphi}f_2(z)
\end{pmatrix},
\tag{4}
]
where (c\hbar K=E) is the particle energy; (k_1=k\cos\varphi); (k_2=k\sin\varphi); (\lambda=k=\sqrt{k_1^2+k_2^2}); (\zeta=\pm1) corresponds to the two possible spin orientations. In this case the functions (f_1) and (f_2) must be determined from the system of equations
[
\left{\frac{d}{dz}\pm\left(\frac{\mu_0}{e\hbar}\mathcal E(z)+\zeta K\right)\right}f_{1,2}
\mp (K-k_0)f_{2,1}=0,
\tag{5}
]
in which the upper and lower signs refer to the first and second component, respectively.
The fundamental possibility of the interaction of a neutral fermion with a static electric field of Coulomb type was noted in ({}^{3}) (see also ({}^{4})). We consider here the case when the electric field (\mathcal E(z)) has the form
[
\frac{\mu_0}{e\hbar}\mathcal E(z)=\gamma z+\gamma_0\qquad(\gamma>0).
\tag{6}
]
Then the system of equations (5) admits the exact solution
[
f_1=\frac{1}{2}\sqrt{1+\frac{k_0}{K}}\,U_n(t),\qquad
f_2=\frac{1}{2}\sqrt{1-\frac{k_0}{K}}\,U_{n+1}(t),
\tag{7}
]
in which (U_n(t)=\sqrt[4]{\gamma/\pi}\,(2^n n!)^{-1/2}e^{-t^2/2}H_n(t)) are Hermite functions, while the variable (t) is equal to
[
t=\sqrt{\gamma}\,z+(\xi k+\gamma_0)/\sqrt{\gamma}.
\tag{8}
]
In this case the energy spectrum is completely discrete and depends only on a single quantum number (n=0,1,2,\ldots)
[
K=\sqrt{k_0^2+2\gamma(n+1)}.
\tag{9}
]
The solutions obtained physically correspond to the motion of the particle along a circle lying in a plane parallel to the (z)-axis and passing through the vector (\mathbf{p}=(p_1,p_2)). The radius of this circle is
[
R^2=2\,\overline{(z-\bar z)^2}
=\frac{2}{\gamma}\left(n+1-\frac{k_0}{2K}\right)
=\frac{1}{\gamma}\left(\frac{K^2-k_0^2}{\gamma}-\frac{k_0}{K}\right),
\tag{10}
]
and the position of the center of the orbit is characterized by the quantity
[
z_0=\bar z=-(\xi k+\gamma_0)/\gamma.
\tag{11}
]
For definite values of the momentum (k=\sqrt{k_1^2+k_2^2}), the spin projection (\xi), and the quantity (\gamma_0) ((\gamma_0=-\xi k)), the center of the circle is at the origin of coordinates.
Moscow State University
named after M. V. Lomonosov
Received
13 X 1965
CITED LITERATURE
- W. Pauli, Rev. Mod. Phys., 13, 203 (1941).
- A. A. Sokolov, I. M. Ternov, DAN, 153, 1052 (1963).
- E. L. Foldy, Phys. Rev., 83, 688 (1951).
- I. A. Akhiezer, V. B. Berestetskii, Quantum Electrodynamics, Moscow, 1959, ยง 15.