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Journal ArticleDOI

Relations between Newtonian mechanics, general relativity, and quantum mechanics

D. Savickas
- 12 Jul 2002 - 
- Vol. 70, Iss: 8, pp 798-807
TLDR
In this article, it was shown that when metric lengths replace coordinate lengths in Dirac's wave equation, it has a covariant form under a metric transformation of the physically measured distances themselves, rather than a coordinate transformation.
Abstract
When Euclidean coordinate lengths are replaced by the metric lengths of a curved geometry within Newton’s second law of motion, the metric form of the second law can be shown to be identical to the geodesic equation of motion of general relativity. The metric coefficients are contained in the metric lengths and satisfy the field equations of general relativity. Because metric lengths are the physically measured lengths, their use makes it possible to understand general relativity directly in terms of physical quantities such as energy and momentum within a curved space–time. The metric form of the second law contains gravitational effects in exactly the same manner as occurs in relativity. Its mathematical derivation uses vectors rather than tensors, and nongravitational forces can occur in this modified second law without a tensor form. Because quantum mechanics is based on Newtonian concepts of energy and momentum, it is shown that when metric lengths replace coordinate lengths in Dirac’s wave equation, it has a covariant form under a metric transformation of the physically measured distances themselves, rather than a coordinate transformation. Metric transformations are also used to describe the Dirac equation for the gravitational central field in a Schwarzschild metric.

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Citations
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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

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TL;DR: In this paper, a spinor affine connection is proposed for general relativity by means of a tetrad or spinor formalism, which is applied to two problems in radiationtheory; a concise proof of a theorem of Goldberg and Sachs and a description of the asymptotic behavior of the Riemann tensor and metric tensor, for outgoing gravitational radiation.
Journal ArticleDOI

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TL;DR: In this article, the authors explore the extent to which the three "crucial tests" support the full structure of the general theory of relativity, and do not merely verify the equivalence principle and the special theory of the relativity, which are well established by other experimental evidence.
Journal ArticleDOI

Equivalence Principle and Red-Shift Measurements

TL;DR: In this paper, the equivalence principle does not lead to the same gravitational redshift as general relativity but does not give specific values for the bending of light rays by a star or for the perihelion rotation of a planetary orbit.
Journal ArticleDOI

Counterexample to the Lenz-Schiff Argument

TL;DR: In this article, it was shown that Schiff's process is not valid for time, but not for space, and only the Newtonian free paths and the gravitational Doppler shift can be validly reobtained by this method.