Dirac equations: Difference between revisions

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(Changed "Lorentz gauge" to "Lorenz gauge" as this is named after the danish physicist Ludvig Lorenz)
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* Scaling is <math>(s_1, s_2) = (n/2-3/2, n/2-1)</math>.
* Scaling is <math>(s_1, s_2) = (n/2-3/2, n/2-1)</math>.
* When <math>n=1</math>, there is GWP for small smooth data [[Chd1973]]
* When <math>n=1</math>, there is GWP for small smooth data [[Chd1973]]
* When <math>n=3</math> there is LWP for <math>(s_1, s_2) = (1, 1)</math> in the Coulomb gauge [[Bou1999]], and for <math>(s_1, s_2) = (1/2+, 1+)</math> in the Lorentz gauge [[Bou1996]]
* When <math>n=3</math> there is LWP for <math>(s_1, s_2) = (1, 1)</math> in the Coulomb gauge [[Bou1999]], and for <math>(s_1, s_2) = (1/2+, 1+)</math> in the Lorenz gauge [[Bou1996]]
** For <math>(s_1, s_2) = (1,2)</math> in the Coulomb gauge this is in [[Bou1996]]
** For <math>(s_1, s_2) = (1,2)</math> in the Coulomb gauge this is in [[Bou1996]]
** This has recently been improved by Selberg to <math>(1/4+, 1)</math>. Note that for technical reasons, lower-regularity results do not automatically imply higher ones when the regularity of one field (e.g. <math>A</math>) is kept fixed.
** This has recently been improved by Selberg to <math>(1/4+, 1)</math>. Note that for technical reasons, lower-regularity results do not automatically imply higher ones when the regularity of one field (e.g. <math>A</math>) is kept fixed.

Revision as of 13:08, 3 January 2009

This article describes several equations named after Paul Dirac.

The Maxwell-Dirac equation

[More info on this equation would be greatly appreciated. - Ed.]

This equation essentially reads

where is a spinor field (solving a coupled massive Dirac equation), and is the Dirac operator with connection A. We put in and in .

  • Scaling is .
  • When , there is GWP for small smooth data Chd1973
  • When there is LWP for in the Coulomb gauge Bou1999, and for in the Lorenz gauge Bou1996
    • For in the Coulomb gauge this is in Bou1996
    • This has recently been improved by Selberg to . Note that for technical reasons, lower-regularity results do not automatically imply higher ones when the regularity of one field (e.g. ) is kept fixed.
    • LWP for smooth data was obtained in Grs1966
    • GWP for small smooth data was obtained in Ge1991
  • When , GWP for small smooth data is known (Psarelli?)

In the nonrelativistic limit this equation converges to a Maxwell-Poisson system for data in the energy space BecMauSb-p2; furthermore one has a local well-posedness result which grows logarithmically in the asymptotic parameter. Earlier work appears in MasNa2003.

Dirac-Klein-Gordon equation

[More info on this equation would be greatly appreciated. - Ed.]

This equation essentially reads

where is a spinor field (solving a coupled massive Dirac equation), is the Dirac operator and is a scalar (real) field. We put in and in .

The energy class is essentially , but the energy density is not positive. However, the norm of is also positive and conserved..

  • Scaling is .
  • When there is GWP for Chd1973, Bou2000 and LWP for Bou2000.
  • When there are some LWP results in Bou2001

Nonlinear Dirac equation

This equation essentially reads

where is a spinor field, is the mass, is a complex parameter, is the zeroth Pauli matrix, and is the spinor inner product.

  • Scaling is (at least in the massless case ).
  • In , LWP is known for when EscVe1997
    • This can be improved to LWP in (and GWP for small data) if an epsilon of additional regularity as assumed in the radial variable MacNkrNaOz-p; in particular one has GWP for radial data.
  • In , GWP is known for small data when MacNaOz-p2. Some results on the nonrelativistic limit of this equation are also obtained in that paper.