Nuclear Physics Methods for Problems in Relativistic Quantum Mechanics
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Published:1998-10
Issue:05
Volume:07
Page:559-571
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ISSN:0218-3013
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Container-title:International Journal of Modern Physics E
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Int. J. Mod. Phys. E
Author:
Moshinsky Marcos1,
Riquer Verónica1
Affiliation:
1. Instituto de Física, UNAM, Apartado Postal 20-364, 01000 México, D. F., México
Abstract
Atomic and molecular physicists have developed extensive and detailed approximate methods for dealing with the relativistic versions of the Hamiltonians appearing in their fields. Nuclear physicists were originally more concerned with non-relativistic problems as the energies they were dealing with were normally small compared with the rest energy of the nucleon. This situation has changed with the appearance of the quark models of nucleons and thus the objective of this paper is to use the standard variational procedures of nuclear physics for problems in relativistic quantum mechanics. The 4 × 4α and β matrices in the Dirac equation are replaced by 2 × 2 matrices, one associated with ordinary spin and the other, which we call sign spin, is mathematically identical to the isospin of nuclear physics. The states on which our Hamiltonians will act will be the usual harmonic oscillator ones with ordinary and sign spin and the frequency ω of the oscillator will be our only variational parameter. The example discussed as an illustration will still be the Coulomb problem as the exact energies of the relativistic bound states are available for comparison. A gap of the order of 2mc2 is observed between states of positive and negative energy, that permits the former to be compared with the exact results.
Publisher
World Scientific Pub Co Pte Lt
Subject
General Physics and Astronomy,Nuclear and High Energy Physics