Do particles and anti-particles really annihilate each other?
Michael K.-H. Kiessling

TL;DR
This paper proposes that electron-positron pairs may have a deep, bound quantum ground state caused by magnetic attraction, challenging the traditional view of annihilation and suggesting a potential link to dark matter.
Contribution
It introduces a novel quantum-mechanical model predicting a low-energy bound state of particles and anti-particles, differing from the standard annihilation paradigm.
Findings
Positronium may have a deep ground state with energy ~2m c^2 below the pseudo-ground state.
Magnetic attraction dominates over electric at short distances in this state.
Such bound states could be a form of dark matter, with minimal interaction with normal matter.
Abstract
Supported by results obtained with semi-classical quantization techniques, and with a quantum mechanical "square-root Klein-Gordon" operator, it is argued that Positronium (Ps) may exhibit a proper quantum-mechanical ground state whose energy level lies below its "hydrogenic (pseudo-) ground state" energy, where is the empirical rest mass of the electron. While the familiar hydrogenic pseudo-ground state of Ps is caused by the Coulomb attraction of electron and anti-electron, modified by small spin-spin and radiative QED corrections, the proper ground state is caused by the magnetic attraction between electron and anti-electron, which dominates over the electric one at short distances. This finding suggests that the familiar "annihilation" of electron and anti-electron is, in reality, simply yet another transition between two atomic energy levels, with the energy…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Mechanics and Applications · Dark Matter and Cosmic Phenomena · Noncommutative and Quantum Gravity Theories
