Dirac membrane

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Template:Short description In quantum mechanics, a Dirac membrane is a model of a charged membrane introduced by Paul Dirac in 1962. Dirac's original motivation was to explain the mass of the muon as an excitation of the ground state corresponding to an electron.[1] Anticipating the birth of string theory by almost a decade, he was the first to introduce what is now called a type of Nambu–Goto action for membranes.[2][3]

In the Dirac membrane model the repulsive electromagnetic forces on the membrane are balanced by the contracting ones coming from the positive tension. In the case of the spherical membrane, classical equations of motion imply that the balance is met for the radius 0.75re, where re is the classical electron radius. Using Bohr–Sommerfeld quantisation condition for the Hamiltonian of the spherically symmetric membrane, Dirac finds the approximation of the mass corresponding to the first excitation as 53me, where me is the mass of the electron, which is about a quarter of the observed muon mass.

Action principle

Dirac chose a non-standard way to formulate the action principle for the membrane. Because closed membranes in 3 provide a natural split of space into the interior and the exterior there exists a special curvilinear system of coordinates xμ in spacetime and a function f(x) such that

  • f(x)=0 defines a membrane
  • f(x)>0, f(x)<0 describe a region outside or inside the membrane

Choosing x1=f(x) and the following gauge σ0=x0=:τ, σ1=x2, σ2=x3 where σα (α=0,1,2) is the internal parametrization of the membrane world-volume, the membrane action proposed by Dirac is

S=SEM+Smembrane
SEM=116πx1>0JgμρgνσFμνFρσd4x,    Smembrane=ω4πx1=0Mdx0dx2dx3

where the induced metric and the factors J and M are given by

gμν=μyΛνyΛ,   Λ=0,1,2,3
J=detgμν.   M=Jg11

In the above yΛ are rectilinear and orthogonal. The space-time signature used is (+,-,-,-). Note that SEM is just a usual action for the electromagnetic field in a curvilinear system while Smembrane is the integral over the membrane world-volume i.e. precisely the type of the action used later in string theory.

Equations of motion

There are 3 equations of motion following from the variation with respect to Aμ and yΛ. They are:

  • variation w.r.t. Aμ for x1>0 - this results in sourceless Maxwell equations
  • variation w.r.t. yΛ for x1>0 - this gives a consequence of Maxwell equations
  • variation w.r.t. yΛ for x1=0
12Fα1Fα1=ωJ1(Mg1μ/g11),μ

The last equation has a geometric interpretation: the r.h.s. is proportional to the curvature of the membrane. For the spherically symmetric case we get

e22ρ4=ωddtρ˙1ρ˙2+2ωρ1ρ˙2

Therefore, the balance condition ρ˙=0 implies a3=e2/4ω where a is the radius of the balanced membrane. The total energy for the spherical membrane with radius ρ is

E(ρ)=e2/2ρ+βρ2

and it is minimal in the equilibrium for β=ω, hence E(a)=3e2/4a. On the other hand, the total energy in the equilibrium should be me (in c=1 units) and so we obtain a=0.75re.

Hamiltonian formulation

Small oscillations about the equilibrium in the spherically symmetric case imply frequencies - 6/a. Therefore, going to quantum theory, the energy of one quantum would be hν=6/a=448me. This is much more than the muon mass but the frequencies are by no means small so this approximation may not work properly. To get a better quantum theory one needs to work out the Hamiltonian of the system and solve the corresponding Schroedinger equation.

For the Hamiltonian formulation Dirac introduces generalised momenta

  • for x1>0: Bμ and wR - momenta conjugate to Aμ and yR respectively (R=1,2,3, coordinate choice x0=y0)
  • for x1=0: WR - momenta conjugate to yR

Then one notices the following constraints

  • for the Maxwell field
    B0=0,   Br,r=0,   wRyR,sBrFrs=0
  • for membrane momenta
    WRyR,2=WRyR,3=0,   16π2WRWR=ω2M2c00(c001)
where cab - reciprocal of gab, a,b=0,2,3.

These constraints need to be included when calculating the Hamiltonian, using the Dirac bracket method. The result of this calculation is the Hamiltonian of the form

H=HEM+Hs
Hs=14π16π2WRWR+ω2(g22g33g232)dx2dx3

where HEM is the Hamiltonian for the electromagnetic field written in the curvilinear system.

Quantisation

For spherically symmetric motion the Hamiltonian is

H=η2+ω2ρ4+e2/2ρ,   {ρ,η}=1

however the direct quantisation is not clear due to the square-root of the differential operator. To get any further Dirac considers the Bohr - Sommerfeld method:

2πn=2ρminρmaxηdρ

and finds E153me for n=1.

See also

References

Template:Reflist

  • P. A. M. Dirac, An Extensible Model of the Electron, Proc. Roy. Soc. A268, (1962) 57–67.