Relativistic Transitions in the Hydrogenic Atoms: Elementary Theory Softcover reprint of hardcover 1st ed. 2009 Edition

Relativistic Transitions in the Hydrogenic Atoms: Elementary Theory Softcover reprint of hardcover 1st ed. 2009 Edition book cover

Relativistic Transitions in the Hydrogenic Atoms: Elementary Theory Softcover reprint of hardcover 1st ed. 2009 Edition

Author(s): Roger Boudet (Author)

  • Publisher: Springer
  • Publication Date: November 19, 2010
  • Edition: Softcover reprint of hardcover 1st ed. 2009
  • Language: English
  • Print length: 148 pages
  • ISBN-10: 3642099173
  • ISBN-13: 9783642099175

Book Description

The aim of this volume is twofold. First, it is an attempt to simplify and clarify the relativistic theory of the hydrogen-like atoms. For this purpose we have used the mathematical formalism, introduced in the Dirac theory of the electron by David Hestenes, based on the use of the real Cli?ord algebra Cl(M) associated with the Minkwoski space–time M, that is, the euclidean 4 R space of signature (1,3). This algebra may be considered as the extension to this space of the theory of the Hamilton quaternions (which occupies an importantplaceintheresolutionoftheDiracequationforthecentralpotential problem). The clarity comes from the real form given by D. Hestenes to the electron wavefunctionthatreplaces,inastrictequivalence,theDiracspinor.Thisform is directly inscribed in the frame of the geometry of the Minkwoski space in which the experiments are necessarily placed. The simplicity derives from the uni?cation of the language used to describe the mathematical objects of the theory and the data of the experiments. The mathematics concerning the de?nition and the use of the algebra Cl(M) are not very complicated. Anyone who knows what a vector space is will be able to understand the geometrical implications of this algebra. The lecture will be perhaps more di?cult for the readers already acquainted with the complex formalism of the matrices and spinors, to the extent that the new language will appear di?erent from the one that they have used. But the correspondence between the two formalisms is ensured in the text at each stage of the theory.

Editorial Reviews

From the Back Cover

When one approaches the study of the quantal relativistic theory of the electron, one may be surprised by the gap which lies between the frame of the experiments, i.e. the real geometry of the space and time, and the abstraction of the complex matrices and spinors formalism employed in the presentation of the theory. This book uses a theory of the electron, introduced by David Hestenes, in which the mathematical language is the same as the one of the geometry of the space and time. Such a language not only allows one to find again the well known results concerning the one-electron atoms theory but furthermore leads easily to the resolution of problems considered for a long time without solution.

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