Darwin Lagrangian

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The Darwin Lagrangian (named after Charles Galton Darwin, grandson of the naturalist) describes the interaction to order v2/c2 between two charged particles in a vacuum where c  is the speed of light. It was derived before the advent of quantum mechanics and resulted from a more detailed investigation of the classical, electromagnetic interactions of the electrons in an atom. From the Bohr model it was known that they should be moving with velocities approaching the speed of light.[1]

The full Lagrangian for two interacting particles is L=Lf+Lint, where the free particle part is Lf=12m1v12+18c2m1v14+12m2v22+18c2m2v24, The interaction is described by Lint=LC+LD, where the Coulomb interaction in Gaussian units is LC=q1q2r, while the Darwin interaction is LD=q1q2r12c2๐ฏ1[๐Ÿ+๐ซ^๐ซ^]๐ฏ2. Here Template:Math and Template:Math are the charges on particles 1 and 2 respectively, Template:Math and Template:Math are the masses of the particles, Template:Math and Template:Math are the velocities of the particles, Template:Math is the speed of light, Template:Math is the vector between the two particles, and ๐ซ^ is the unit vector in the direction of Template:Math.

The first part is the Taylor expansion of free Lagrangian of two relativistic particles to second order in v. The Darwin interaction term is due to one particle reacting to the magnetic field generated by the other particle. If higher-order terms in Template:Math are retained, then the field degrees of freedom must be taken into account, and the interaction can no longer be taken to be instantaneous between the particles. In that case retardation effects must be accounted for.[2]Template:Rp

Derivation in vacuum

The relativistic interaction Lagrangian for a particle with charge q interacting with an electromagnetic field is[2]Template:Rp Lint=qΦ+qc๐ฎ๐€, where Template:Math is the relativistic velocity of the particle. The first term on the right generates the Coulomb interaction. The second term generates the Darwin interaction.

The vector potential in the Coulomb gauge is described by[2]Template:Rp 2๐€1c22๐€t2=4πc๐‰t where the transverse current Template:Math is the solenoidal current (see Helmholtz decomposition) generated by a second particle. The divergence of the transverse current is zero.

The current generated by the second particle is ๐‰=q2๐ฏ2δ(๐ซ๐ซ2), which has a Fourier transform ๐‰(๐ค)d3rexp(i๐ค๐ซ)๐‰(๐ซ)=q2๐ฏ2exp(i๐ค๐ซ2).

The transverse component of the current is ๐‰t(๐ค)=q2[๐Ÿ๐ค^๐ค^]๐ฏ2ei๐ค๐ซ2.

It is easily verified that ๐ค๐‰t(๐ค)=0, which must be true if the divergence of the transverse current is zero. We see that ๐‰t(๐ค) is the component of the Fourier transformed current perpendicular to Template:Math.

From the equation for the vector potential, the Fourier transform of the vector potential is ๐€(๐ค)=4πcq2k2[๐Ÿ๐ค^๐ค^]๐ฏ2ei๐ค๐ซ2 where we have kept only the lowest order term in Template:Math.

The inverse Fourier transform of the vector potential is ๐€(๐ซ)=d3k(2π)3๐€(๐ค)ei๐ค๐ซ1=q22c1r[๐Ÿ+๐ซ^๐ซ^]๐ฏ2 where ๐ซ=๐ซ1๐ซ2 (see Template:Slink).

The Darwin interaction term in the Lagrangian is then LD=q1q2r12c2๐ฏ1[๐Ÿ+๐ซ^๐ซ^]๐ฏ2 where again we kept only the lowest order term in Template:Math.

Lagrangian equations of motion

The equation of motion for one of the particles is ddt๐ฏ1L(๐ซ1,๐ฏ1)=1L(๐ซ1,๐ฏ1) d๐ฉ1dt=1L(๐ซ1,๐ฏ1) where Template:Math is the momentum of the particle.

Free particle

The equation of motion for a free particle neglecting interactions between the two particles is ddt[(1+12v12c2)m1๐ฏ1]=0 ๐ฉ1=(1+12v12c2)m1๐ฏ1

Interacting particles

For interacting particles, the equation of motion becomes ddt[(1+12v12c2)m1๐ฏ1+q1c๐€(๐ซ1)]=q1q2r+[q1q2r12c2๐ฏ1[๐Ÿ+๐ซ^๐ซ^]๐ฏ2] d๐ฉ1dt=q1q2r2๐ซ^+q1q2r212c2{๐ฏ1(๐ซ^๐ฏ2)+๐ฏ2(๐ซ^๐ฏ1)๐ซ^[๐ฏ1(๐Ÿ+3๐ซ^๐ซ^)๐ฏ2]} ๐ฉ1=(1+12v12c2)m1๐ฏ1+q1c๐€(๐ซ1) ๐€(๐ซ1)=q22c1r[๐Ÿ+๐ซ^๐ซ^]๐ฏ2 ๐ซ=๐ซ1๐ซ2

Hamiltonian for two particles in a vacuum

The Darwin Hamiltonian for two particles in a vacuum is related to the Lagrangian by a Legendre transformation H=๐ฉ1๐ฏ1+๐ฉ2๐ฏ2L.

The Hamiltonian becomes H(๐ซ1,๐ฉ1,๐ซ2,๐ฉ2)=(114p12m12c2)p122m1+(114p22m22c2)p222m2+q1q2rq1q2r12m1m2c2๐ฉ1[๐Ÿ+๐ซ^๐ซ^]๐ฉ2.

This Hamiltonian gives the interaction energy between the two particles. It has recently been argued that when expressed in terms of particle velocities, one should simply set ๐ฉ=m๐ฏ in the last term and reverse its sign.[3]

Equations of motion

The Hamiltonian equations of motion are ๐ฏ1=H๐ฉ1 and d๐ฉ1dt=1H, which yield ๐ฏ1=(112p12m12c2)๐ฉ1m1q1q22m1m2c21r[๐Ÿ+๐ซ^๐ซ^]๐ฉ2 and d๐ฉ1dt=q1q2r2๐ซ^+q1q2r212m1m2c2{๐ฉ1(๐ซ^๐ฉ2)+๐ฉ2(๐ซ^๐ฉ1)๐ซ^[๐ฉ1(๐Ÿ+3๐ซ^๐ซ^)๐ฉ2]}

Quantum electrodynamics

The structure of the Darwin interaction can also be clearly seen in quantum electrodynamics and due to the exchange of photons in lowest order of perturbation theory. When the photon has four-momentum Template:Nowrap with wave vector Template:Nowrap its propagator in the Coulomb gauge has two components.[4]

D00(k)=1๐ค2

gives the Coulomb interaction between two charged particles, while

Dij(k)=1ω2c2๐ค2(δijkikj๐ค2)

describes the exchange of a transverse photon. It has a polarization vector ๐žλ and couples to a particle with charge q and three-momentum ๐ฉ with a strength q4π๐žλ๐ฉ/m. Since ๐žλ๐ค=0 in this gauge, it doesn't matter if one uses the particle momentum before or after the photon couples to it.

In the exchange of the photon between the two particles one can ignore the frequency ω compared with c๐ค in the propagator working to the accuracy in v2/c2 that is needed here. The two parts of the propagator then give together the effective Hamiltonian

Hint(๐ค)=4πq1q2๐ค24πq1q2m1m2c2๐ค2๐ฉ1(๐Ÿ๐ค^๐ค^)๐ฉ2

for their interaction in k-space. This is now identical with the classical result and there is no trace of the quantum effects used in this derivation.

A similar calculation can be done when the photon couples to Dirac particles with spin Template:Nowrap and used for a derivation of the Breit equation. It gives the same Darwin interaction but also additional terms involving the spin degrees of freedom and depending on the Planck constant.[4]

See also

References

Template:Reflist

  1. โ†‘ C.G. Darwin, The Dynamical Motions of Charged Particles, Philosophical Magazine 39, 537-551 (1920).
  2. โ†‘ 2.0 2.1 2.2 Template:Cite book
  3. โ†‘ K.T. McDonald, Darwin Energy Paradoxes, Princeton University (2019).
  4. โ†‘ 4.0 4.1 V. B. Berestetskii, E. M. Lifshitz, and L. P. Pitaevskii, Relativistic Quantum Theory, Pergamon Press, Oxford (1971).