Axial current as the origin of quantum intrinsic orbital angular momentum
Orkash Amat, Nurimangul Nurmamat, Yong-Feng Huang, Cheng-Ming Li, Jin-Jun Geng, Chen-Ran Hu, Ze-Cheng Zou, Xiao-Fei Dong, Chen Deng, Fan Xu, Xiao-li Zhang, Chen Du

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that the axial current density is the fundamental origin of quantum intrinsic orbital angular momentum, providing a new theoretical framework that explains IOAM's role in quantum tunneling and nonlinear effects.
Contribution
It introduces the axial current as the generator of IOAM and offers a comprehensive theory addressing quantum angular momentum in tunneling regimes.
Findings
IOAM can persist in pure quantum tunneling processes
Axial current density determines nonlinear and tunneling effects
Framework addresses limitations of existing ionization theories
Abstract
We show that the axial current density is the physical origin (generator) of quantum intrinsic orbital angular momentum (IOAM). Without the axial current, the IOAM of particles vanishes. Broadly speaking, we argue that the spiral or interference characteristics of the axial current density determine the occurrence of nonlinear or tunneling effects in any spacetime-dependent quantum systems. Our findings offer a comprehensive theoretical framework that addresses the limitations of Keldysh's ionization theory and provides new insights into the angular momentum properties of quantum systems, particularly in tunneling-dominated regimes. Using Wigner function methods, fermionic generalized two-level model, and Berry phase simulations, we predict that IOAM effect can persist even in pure quantum tunneling processes. These results open the door for experimental verification of IOAM effects in…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Solar and Space Plasma Dynamics · Advanced Mathematical Theories and Applications
