Relativistic Mechanics Theory for Electrons that Exhibits Spin, Zitterbewegung, Superposition and Produces Dirac's Wave Equation
James L. Beck (California Institute of Technology)

TL;DR
This paper introduces a neo-classical relativistic mechanics model for electrons that naturally incorporates spin, zitterbewegung, and superposition, deriving Dirac's wave equation from a classical framework.
Contribution
It presents a novel classical mechanics theory that explains electron spin and zitterbewegung, reproduces Dirac's equation, and clarifies the electron's internal motion without probabilistic interpretation.
Findings
Electron spin is modeled as a natural part of its space-time path.
The theory reproduces Dirac's wave equation from a classical perspective.
Electron's local spin motion corresponds to zitterbewegung and generates electromagnetic dipole energies.
Abstract
A neo-classical relativistic mechanics theory is presented where the spin of an electron is a natural part of its space-time path as a point particle. The fourth-order equation of motion corresponds to the same Lagrangian function in proper time as in special relativity except for an additional spin energy term. The total motion can be decomposed into a sum of a local spin motion about a point and a global motion of this point, called the spin center. The global motion is sub-luminal and obeys Newton's second law in proper time, the time for a clock fixed at the spin center, while the total motion occurs at the speed of light c, consistent with the eigenvalues of Dirac's velocity operators having magnitude c. The local spin motion corresponds to Schr\"odinger's zitterbewegung and is a perpetual motion, which for a free electron has a circular path in the spin-center frame. In an…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Mechanics and Applications · Relativity and Gravitational Theory · Quantum and Classical Electrodynamics
