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On the Dirac Theory of Spin 1/2 Particles and Its Non-Relativistic Limit

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TLDR
In this paper, a canonical transformation on the Dirac Hamiltonian for a free particle is obtained in which positive and negative energy states are separately represented by two-component wave functions.
Abstract
By a canonical transformation on the Dirac Hamiltonian for a free particle, a representation of the Dirac theory is obtained in which positive and negative energy states are separately represented by two-component wave functions. Playing an important role in the new representation are new operators for position and spin of the particle which are physically distinct from these operators in the conventional representation. The components of the time derivative of the new position operator all commute and have for eigenvalues all values between $\ensuremath{-}c$ and $c$. The new spin operator is a constant of the motion unlike the spin operator in the conventional representation. By a comparison of the new Hamiltonian with the non-relativistic Pauli-Hamiltonian for particles of spin \textonehalf{}, one finds that it is these new operators rather than the conventional ones which pass over into the position and spin operators in the Pauli theory in the non-relativistic limit. The transformation of the new representation is also made in the case of interaction of the particle with an external electromagnetic field. In this way the proper non-relativistic Hamiltonian (essentially the Pauli-Hamiltonian) is obtained in the non-relativistic limit. The same methods may be applied to a Dirac particle interacting with any type of external field (various meson fields, for example) and this allows one to find the proper non-relativistic Hamiltonian in each such case. Some light is cast on the question of why a Dirac electron shows some properties characteristic of a particle of finite extension by an examination of the relationship between the new and the conventional position operators.

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Quantum dynamics of relativistic electrons

TL;DR: In this article, a split-operator method for calculating the time-evolution of Dirac wave functions is presented, with the help of self-adaptive numerical grids, and the dynamics of an initially free electronic Dirac packet under the influence of an ultra-intense laser pulse and its scattering at a highly charged ion.
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Relationship of flux quantization to charge quantization and the electromagnetic coupling constant

TL;DR: In this paper, the concept of a closed quantized flux loop is investigated, leading to a theory of a charged lepton (muon or electron) in order to reconstruct a continuous magnetic dipole field of a source lepton, assuming that the flux loop adopts a statistical distribution of alternative forms characterized by a complex probability amplitude superposition.

What comes beyond the standard models

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a review of cosmology models and discuss possible extensions and generalizations, by paying a critical attention to the still open is-sues as, for instance, the detectability of child universes and the properties of quantumtunnelling processes.
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One-dimensional semirelativity for electrons in carbon nanotubes

TL;DR: In this article, it was shown that the band structure of single-wall semiconducting carbon nanotubes (CNT) is analogous to relativistic description of electrons in vacuum, with the maximum velocity $u={10}^{8}\phantom{\rule{0.3em}{0ex}}\math{cm}∕\mathrm{s}$ replacing the light velocity.
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