Details
Original language | English |
---|---|
Article number | 326 |
Journal | International Journal of Theoretical Physics |
Volume | 63 |
Issue number | 12 |
Early online date | 24 Dec 2024 |
Publication status | E-pub ahead of print - 24 Dec 2024 |
Abstract
Avoiding the assumption that relativistic scattering be describable by interacting fields we find in the Schrödinger picture relativistic scattering closely analogue to the non-relativistic case. On the space of scattering states the invariant mass operator M′ of the interacting time evolution has to be unitarily equivalent to the invariant mass M=P2 where P, acting on many-particle states, is the sum of the one-particle four-momenta. For an observer at rest P0 generates the free time evolution. Poincaré symmetry requires the interacting Hamiltonian H′ to Lorentz transform as 0-component of a four-vector and to commute with the four-velocity U=P/M but not with P, else there is no scattering. Even though H′ does not commute with P, the scattering matrix does. The four-velocity U generates translations of states as they are seen by shifted observers. Superpositions of nearly mass degenerate particles such as a Klong are seen by an inversely shifted observer as a shifted Klong with an unchanged relative phase. In contrast, the four-momentum P generates oscillated superpositions e.g. a shifted Kshort with a changed relative phase. The probability of scattering of massive particles is shown to be approximately proportional to the spacetime overlap of their position wave functions. This is basic to macroscopic locality and justifies to represent the machinery of actual scattering experiments by the vacuum. In suitable variables the relativistic Hamiltonian of many-particle states is not the sum of a Hamiltonian for the motion of the center and a commuting Hamiltonian for the relative motion but factorizes as their product. They act on different variables of the wave functions.
Keywords
- Center variables, Covariance of observers, Interacting mass, Luminosity, Relativistic scattering, Strong limit
ASJC Scopus subject areas
- Mathematics(all)
- General Mathematics
- Physics and Astronomy(all)
- Physics and Astronomy (miscellaneous)
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In: International Journal of Theoretical Physics, Vol. 63, No. 12, 326, 24.12.2024.
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › Research › peer review
}
TY - JOUR
T1 - Relativistic Covariance of Scattering
AU - Dragon, Norbert
N1 - Publisher Copyright: © The Author(s) 2024.
PY - 2024/12/24
Y1 - 2024/12/24
N2 - Avoiding the assumption that relativistic scattering be describable by interacting fields we find in the Schrödinger picture relativistic scattering closely analogue to the non-relativistic case. On the space of scattering states the invariant mass operator M′ of the interacting time evolution has to be unitarily equivalent to the invariant mass M=P2 where P, acting on many-particle states, is the sum of the one-particle four-momenta. For an observer at rest P0 generates the free time evolution. Poincaré symmetry requires the interacting Hamiltonian H′ to Lorentz transform as 0-component of a four-vector and to commute with the four-velocity U=P/M but not with P, else there is no scattering. Even though H′ does not commute with P, the scattering matrix does. The four-velocity U generates translations of states as they are seen by shifted observers. Superpositions of nearly mass degenerate particles such as a Klong are seen by an inversely shifted observer as a shifted Klong with an unchanged relative phase. In contrast, the four-momentum P generates oscillated superpositions e.g. a shifted Kshort with a changed relative phase. The probability of scattering of massive particles is shown to be approximately proportional to the spacetime overlap of their position wave functions. This is basic to macroscopic locality and justifies to represent the machinery of actual scattering experiments by the vacuum. In suitable variables the relativistic Hamiltonian of many-particle states is not the sum of a Hamiltonian for the motion of the center and a commuting Hamiltonian for the relative motion but factorizes as their product. They act on different variables of the wave functions.
AB - Avoiding the assumption that relativistic scattering be describable by interacting fields we find in the Schrödinger picture relativistic scattering closely analogue to the non-relativistic case. On the space of scattering states the invariant mass operator M′ of the interacting time evolution has to be unitarily equivalent to the invariant mass M=P2 where P, acting on many-particle states, is the sum of the one-particle four-momenta. For an observer at rest P0 generates the free time evolution. Poincaré symmetry requires the interacting Hamiltonian H′ to Lorentz transform as 0-component of a four-vector and to commute with the four-velocity U=P/M but not with P, else there is no scattering. Even though H′ does not commute with P, the scattering matrix does. The four-velocity U generates translations of states as they are seen by shifted observers. Superpositions of nearly mass degenerate particles such as a Klong are seen by an inversely shifted observer as a shifted Klong with an unchanged relative phase. In contrast, the four-momentum P generates oscillated superpositions e.g. a shifted Kshort with a changed relative phase. The probability of scattering of massive particles is shown to be approximately proportional to the spacetime overlap of their position wave functions. This is basic to macroscopic locality and justifies to represent the machinery of actual scattering experiments by the vacuum. In suitable variables the relativistic Hamiltonian of many-particle states is not the sum of a Hamiltonian for the motion of the center and a commuting Hamiltonian for the relative motion but factorizes as their product. They act on different variables of the wave functions.
KW - Center variables
KW - Covariance of observers
KW - Interacting mass
KW - Luminosity
KW - Relativistic scattering
KW - Strong limit
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85212947482&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.48550/arXiv.2307.15426
DO - 10.48550/arXiv.2307.15426
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85212947482
VL - 63
JO - International Journal of Theoretical Physics
JF - International Journal of Theoretical Physics
SN - 0020-7748
IS - 12
M1 - 326
ER -