On the Fermi gas, the Sommerfeld fine structure constant, and the electron-electron scattering in conductors
C. A. M. dos Santos, M. S. da Luz, F. S. Oliveira, and L. M. S Alves

TL;DR
This paper presents a theoretical model linking Fermi gas properties, electromagnetic forces, and electron motion to explain electrical resistivity and magnetic phenomena in conductors, aligning well with experimental data.
Contribution
It introduces a novel theoretical framework incorporating electrical energy into Fermi gas theory and relates electron motion to helical paths, magnetic flux quantization, and electron spin.
Findings
Predicts low-temperature electrical resistivity accurately
Shows magnetic force is proportional to electrical force with a factor involving the fine structure constant
Explains electron motion as helical paths consistent with quantum properties
Abstract
Electrical energy is considered as a fundamental parameter for inclusion in Fermi gas theory, in addition to thermal energy. It is argued that electrical energy can move some electrons to above the Fermi Level, providing free charges to carry the electrical current, even at absolute zero temperature. The Drude model, Ohm's law, quantum resistance, and the electrical resistivity due to electron-electron scattering appear naturally as a consequence of the theoretical description, which is based on the quantization of the angular momentum and the Fermi-Dirac distribution, considering total energy as = k + . The electrical and magnetic forces acting on an electron are related to the ratio between the Fermi velocity and the speed of light and show that the electron motion is due to helical paths. Considering the center of mass description for the Bohr atom,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum, superfluid, helium dynamics · Advanced Physical and Chemical Molecular Interactions · High-pressure geophysics and materials
