Klein-Gordon equation: Difference between revisions

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==Negative energy states and antiparticles==
==Negative energy states and antiparticles==
==Klein-Gordon equation with Coulomb potential==

Revision as of 02:02, 15 April 2009

How to construct

Starting from the relativistic connection between energy and momentum:

Substituting and , we get Klein-Gordon equation for free particles as follows:

Klein-Gordon can also be written as the following:

where is d'Alembert operator and .

Equation (9.3) looks like a classical wave equation with an extra term .

For a charged particle couple with electromagnetic field, Klein-Gordon equation is as follows:

Klein-Gordon is second order in time. Therefore, to see how the states of a system evolve in time we need to know both and at a certain time. While in nonrelativistic quantum mechanics, we only need

Also because the Klein-Gordon equation is second order in time, it has the solutions with either sign of energy . The negative energy solution of Klein-Gordon equation has a strange property that the energy decreases as the magnitude of the momentum increases. We will see that the negative energy solutions of Klein-Gordon equation describe antiparticles, while the positive energy solutions describe particles.

Continuity equation

Multiplying (9.2) by from the left, we get:

Multiplying the complex conjugate form of (9.2) by from the left, we get:

Subtracting (9.5) from (9.4), we get:

this give us the continuity equation:

where

Nonrelativistic limit

Negative energy states and antiparticles

Klein-Gordon equation with Coulomb potential