> I'm trying to read Dirac's paper "The Quantum Theory of the Electron."
> I am really struggling with the first displayed equation on 611. Is
> there a sign error?
Oops. Sorry. I took another look at the paper. You're referring to the
signs *outside* the parentheses. Yes, equation (1) is an error. Dirac
(indirectly) said just as much by (wrongly) stating that (3) is a
consequence of (1). But (3) has the other sign.
He would have noticed it, had he considered the non-relativistic limit
as a consistency check.
> F = -(W/c - eA_0/c)^2 + (p + eA/c)^2 + m^2c^2?
I was focusing on the wrong thing, the different signs used *inside*
the parentheses in:
(+i h d/d(ct) + e/c A_0)^2
versus the signs used in
|-i h d/dx + e/c A|^2.
To expand on my previous discussion, you need only pass over to the
non-relativistic form to see the error. First replace E by H = E -
mc^2 (where I'm using H to denote the kinetic energy), replace (1/c)^2
by the parameter alpha and write:
0 = -p_0^2 + p^2 + m^2 c^2
= -(E/c)^2 + p^2 + m^2 c^2
= -(H/c + mc)^2 + p^2 + m^2 c^2
= p^2 - 2mH - alpha H^2.
The non-relativistic form, with alpha = 0, has p^2 = 2mH. If, in
contrast, you use a + sign with p_0 you get a mess:
(H/c + mc)^2 + p^2 + m^2 c^2
= p^2 + 2mH + alpha H^2 + 2m^2/alpha
which diverges in the limit alpha -> 0.
As I mentioned, Dirac made a grave error (here and elsewhere in many
other respects) in asserting at the outset that his developments were
something that were "specific and unique to relativity" (to
paraphrase). As a result of that error, he disrupted the natural
linkage between the two forms; and, thus, the natural sanity and error
check that comes from having a non-relativistic form to check
everything against.
The conceptions he raised at the outset are (yet another) case of bad
information that eventually get handed down in the literature as
community folklore and finds its way into textbooks. In this case, it
has taken a long time since to excise it and has never been fully
excised. We now know today that:
(1) Spin has nothing per se to do with quantum theory. It is firmly
rooted in *classical* theory and is only present in quantum theory by
way of inheritance from classical theory, not something that emerges
as a consequence of quantum theory. It arises classically as a direct
result of the symplectic classification of the Poisson manifold
associated with the Lie algebras that define the respective kinematic
symmetry groups (be it Poincare' for relativity or Bargmann for non-
relativistic theory).
(2) Spin has nothing per se to do with relativity, either. The
symplectic classes for the Bargmann group also include representations
corresponding to elementary systems of non-zero mass and spin. This is
the non-relativistic version of spin.
(3) The Dirac equation (and, as I pointed out) even the de Broglie
correspondence itself are not specific to relativity, either. Both
have non-relativistic forms. Therefore, neither can be used as a way
of qualitatively distinguishing relativity from non-relativistic
theory.
(4) The linearity of d/dt in the Dirac equation is a red herring. You
can write the Klein-Gordon equation for *arbitrary* spin in this form
as the Dirac-Kemmer equations.
(5) The "asymmetry" of the roles played by t and (x, y, z) in the
Schroedinger equation is also a red herring, because there is no
asymmetry, when the equations are written the right way (as I pointed
out). They BOTH enter into the equation within a *bilinear quadratic
form*, when rendered in the following form:
(p^2 - 2 mu H - alpha H^2) psi = 0
mu psi = m psi
or re-written in form as the following differential equations:
-h-bar^2 (del^2 + 2 d_t d_u - alpha d_t^2) psi = 0
-i h-bar d_u psi = m psi
These equations yield results that are equivalent to the Klein-Gordon
equation when alpha = (1/c)^2, and equivalent to the Schroedinger
equation when alpha = 0.
(6) At the same time, the absence of any coordinate entering the
equations lineraly is not specific to non-relativistic theory! Both
the relativistic and non-relativistic forms have the linear equation.
So, whatever problem that Dirac thought the Schroedinger equation had
that he thought he had to remedy, its apparent linearity in t was
obviously not it, and was never anything more than a red herring. The
asymmetric appearance of t versus (x, y, z) was obviously not it
either and was nothing more than a red herring. The emergence of spin
was clearly not it either, since it was already there in both
classical and non-relativistic theory in the first place (and also
emerges in the non-relativistic form of the Dirac equation). So, that
too was a red herring.
And the errors in all cases come from not asking the right question at
the outset: what is the Correspondence Limit of all this?
The first axiom of Relativity, before even posing the other "two"
axioms is that all that *was* valid and established under the old
paradigm (even including those things that we only came to be aware of
*after* 1905 as having been part of the old paradigm all along, such
as the fact that the Bargmann group is the symmetry group of non-
relativistic theory and not the Galilei group) should be grandfathered
into the new paradigm, apart from corrections that, as functions of
alpha, go to 0 as alpha -> 0; and vice versa. In other words: the
Correspondence Limit has to be checked, and checked in both
directions.
Because he failed to check the Correspondence Limit of equation (1)
(even going as far as to assert that his entire line of development
had no correspondence limit at all, by virtue of it being
"specifically and uniquely relativistic" to paraphrase), he wrote down
equation (1) that made absolutely no sense that could have easily been
checked, verified and corrected by seeing what their non-relativistic
limits were.
I just did that, for equation (3). I'll leave it as an exercise for
(the correction of) equation (1), along with the exercise of deriving
the Pauli-Schroedinger equation from as the non-relativistic form of
(1), after the correction is made.
This is why you should be keeping the c's in equations,
notwithstanding what the current conventions are; and keeping the c's
in the *right* places. There is no c in A/c, as Dirac wrote it. A is
the potential that goes with momentum and is what Maxwell called the
"electromagnetic momentum", so it's p + eA, not p + eA/c. So this way,
you don't end up losing contact with the real world by descending too
far into the Ivory Tower of "everything is c = 1, h-bar = 1 and G = 1
or 8 pi."
When equation (4) is written in a form within a universal framework
that encompasses both the relativistic and non-relativistic forms, it
would take the form:
(a^x p_x + a^y p_y + a^z p_z - d H + e M) psi = 0
(M - alpha H) psi = m psi
To recover the quadratic form
rho := p^2 - 2MH + alpha H^2 = 0
from the first of these requires:
a^i a^j + a^j a^i = delta^{ij}, for i, j = x, y, z
a^i d + d a^i = 0, a^i e + e a^i = 0, for i = x, y, z
d^2 = alpha
de + ed = 2
e^2 = 0
This generates a Clifford algebra with *real* coefficients that is the
same -- for *all* alpha -- as either:
(a) the Clifford algebra with complex coefficients generated from
{ gamma_0, gamma_1, gamma_2, gamma_3 }, or
(b) the Clifford algebra with real coefficients generated from
{ gamma_0, gamma_1, gamma_2, gamma_3, gamma_5 }.
As mentioned before, for alpha = 0, this is the Schroedinger equation.
For alpha > 0, it is the Dirac equation with light speed set to c =
alpha^{-1/2}. Finally, what was not mentioned is that for alpha < 0,
it is the *Euclidean* form of the Dirac equation.
An interesting exercise, as alluded to before, is to write (a^x, a^y,
a^z, d, e) in terms of the gamma's in (b).