Zitterbewegung
Zitterbewegung ("trembling motion" from German) is a hypothetical rapid motion of elementary particles, in particular electrons, that obey the Dirac equation. The existence of such motion was first proposed by Erwin Schrödinger in 1930 as a result of his analysis of the wave packet solutions of the Dirac equation for relativistic electrons in free space, in which an interference between positive and negative energy states produces what appears to be a fluctuation (at the speed of light) of the position of an electron around the median, with an angular frequency of , or approximately 1.6×1021 radians per second. A re-examination of Dirac theory, however, shows that interference between positive and negative energy states may not be a necessary criterion for observing zitterbewegung.[1]
Zitterbewegung of a free relativistic particle has never been observed. However, it has been simulated twice. First, with a trapped ion, by putting it in an environment such that the non-relativistic Schrödinger equation for the ion has the same mathematical form as the Dirac equation (although the physical situation is different).[2][3] Then, in 2013, it was simulated in a setup with Bose–Einstein condensates.[4]
Theory
The time-dependent Dirac equation
where is the Dirac Hamiltonian for an electron in free space
in the Heisenberg picture implies that any operator Q obeys the equation
In particular, the time-dependence of the position operator is given by
where .
The above equation shows that the operator can be interpreted as the kth component of a "velocity operator". To add time-dependence to , one implements the Heisenberg picture, which says
The time-dependence of the velocity operator is given by
where .
Now, because both and are time-independent, the above equation can easily be integrated twice to find the explicit time-dependence of the position operator. First:
Then:
where is the position operator at time .
The resulting expression consists of an initial position, a motion proportional to time, and an unexpected oscillation term with an amplitude equal to the Compton wavelength. That oscillation term is the so-called "Zitterbewegung".
Interestingly, the "Zitterbewegung" term vanishes on taking expectation values for wave-packets that are made up entirely of positive- (or entirely of negative-) energy waves. This can be achieved by taking a Foldy–Wouthuysen transformation. Thus, we arrive at the interpretation of the "Zitterbewegung" as being caused by interference between positive- and negative-energy wave components.
See also
- Casimir effect
- Lamb shift
- Stochastic electrodynamics: Zitterbewegung is explained as an interaction of a classical particle with the zero-point field.
- Foldy–Wouthuysen transformation
References and notes
- ↑ David Hestenes (1990). "The zitterbewegung interpretation of quantum mechanics". Foundations of Physics. 20 (10). Bibcode:1990FoPh...20.1213H. doi:10.1007/BF01889466.
- ↑ "Quantum physics: Trapped ion set to quiver". Nature News and Views.
- ↑ Gerritsma; Kirchmair; Zähringer; Solano; Blatt; Roos (2010). "Quantum simulation of the Dirac equation". Nature. 463 (7277). arXiv:0909.0674. Bibcode:2010Natur.463...68G. doi:10.1038/nature08688.
- ↑ Leblanc; Beeler; Jimenez-Garcia; Perry; Sugawa; Williams; Spielman (2013). "Direct observation of zitterbewegung in a Bose–Einstein condensate". New Journal of Physics. 15 (7). doi:10.1088/1367-2630/15/7/073011.
Further reading
- Schrödinger, E. (1930). Über die kräftefreie Bewegung in der relativistischen Quantenmechanik [On the free movement in relativistic quantum mechanics] (in German). pp. 418–428. OCLC 881393652.
- Schrödinger, E. (1931). Zur Quantendynamik des Elektrons [Quantum Dynamics of the Electron] (in German). pp. 63–72.
- Messiah, A. (1962). "XX, Section 37". Quantum Mechanics (pdf). II. pp. 950–952. ASIN B001Q71VQS. ISBN 9780471597681.
External links
- The Zitterbewegung Interpretation of Quantum Mechanics, an alternative explanation in addition to positive-negative energy states interference.
- Zitterbewegung in New Scientist
- Geometric Algebra in Quantum Mechanics
- Summary of trapped ion simulation