History and Some Aspects of the Lamb Shift
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Background
The study of the hydrogen atom has been at the heart of the development of modern physics…theoretical calculations reach precision up to the 12th decimal place…high resolution laser spectroscopy experiments…reach to the 15th decimal place for the 1S–2S transition…The Rydberg constant is known to 6 parts in [20,21,22]. Today the precision is so great that measurement of the energy levels in the H atom has been used to determine the radius of the proton.
1.2. Outline of This Paper
2. History and Significance of Bethe’s Calculation
2.1. Brief History before Bethe’s Calculation
The theory thus leads to the false prediction that spectral lines will be infinitely displaced from the values predicted by the Bohr frequency condition…As it stands the integral over diverges absolutely. We have treated these difficulties in some detail because they show that the present theory will not be applicable to any problem where relativistic effects are important, where that is, we cannot be guided by the limiting case [c is the speed of light.] … It appears improbable that the difficulties discussed in this work will be soluble without an adequate theory of the masses of the electron and the proton; nor it is certain that such a theory will be possible on the basis of the special theory of relativity.
Kramers had said [at the Shelter Island Conference] that we misunderstood the self energy of the electron. The divergent self energy of the electron was already included in the physical mass. We need to consider the difference in the self energy between a free electron and one bound in an atom.
And of course the people at Cornell were very closely in touch with the people in Columbia, and in particular Willis Lamb talked to Hans Bethe who was the professor at Cornell, and Bethe then sat down and gave the first more or less adequate theory of the Lamb shift, just from a physical point of view. He understood that the reason why you had the Lamb shift was that the electron in the hydrogen atom was interacting with the Maxwell electromagnetic field, in addition to interacting with the proton, so that the effect of the fluctuations in the Maxwell field were disturbing the electron while it was revolving around the proton, causing a slight change in the position of the orbits. And so it was the back reaction of the electromagnetic field on the electron that Lamb had been measuring. And so Bethe understood that from a physical point of view. The problem was then, could you actually calculate it? And with the quantum electrodynamics as it was then, it turned out you couldn’t; that if you just applied the rules of the game as they were then understood and tried to calculate the Lamb shift, the answer came out infinity, not a number of megacycles but an infinite number of megacycles. So that wasn’t very useful and so it was clearly a real defect of the theory that it couldn’t grapple with this problem.
The hydrogen atom being the simplest and most deeply explored object in the whole universe, in a way—I mean if you don’t understand the hydrogen atom, you don’t understand anything, and to find that things were wrong even with a hydrogen atom was a big shock. So it became the ambition of every theoretical physicist to understand this.
The combination of these two talks of Kramers and Lamb stimulated me greatly and I said to myself: lets try to calculate that Lamb shift, lets try to calculate the difference between the self energy of a free electron and that of an electron bound in the hydrogen in the state. At the conference I said to myself: I can do that. And indeed once the conference was over I traveled to Schenectady to General Electric Research Labs. On the train I figured out how much that difference might be. I had to remember the interaction of the electromagnetic quanta with the electron. I wasn’t sure about a factor of two. So if I remembered correctly, I seem to get just about the right energy separation of 1000 MHz, but I might be wrong by a factor of two. So the first thing I did when I came to the library at General Electric was to look up Heitler’s book on radiation theory. I found that indeed I had remembered the number correctly and that I got 1000 MHz. …I was helped very much by a previous paper by Weisskopf who had show that in Dirac pair theory that the energy of an electron only diverged logarithmically when you get to high energy. So I said to myself once I take the difference between bound electron and free electron the logarithmic divergence will probably disappear and it will converge. So lets just calculate the effect of quanta up to the energy of the electron mass times c squared and lets hope the relativistic correction won’t make any difference.
He had this intense love of doing physics collectively. I mean that it wasn’t really physics if you did by yourself, it was something you did with a group of people. And so I just loved it from the beginning and became very much a part of it right away. And then, of course, his way of work was actually quite unique, I mean if you compare Bethe with anybody else I knew. First of all, he had total command of the facts, that he absolutely just—you never needed to look up a number in a table because he knew them all. He knew all the energy levels of hydrogen and he knew the atomic weights of the different elements and the density of lead and gold and uranium, all these just physical quantities, he knew them all. In addition of course, he had an extraordinary ability to sit down and calculate and just simply go at it…And he was, of course, also just extraordinarily reliable: if he said something, you could believe it. He was very careful about everything he said. So just a thoroughly solid person. Very different from Feynman, because Feynman was far more imaginative. I mean, one thing Bethe did not have was imagination; he never really invented anything, he just used the theories that were there to explain the facts, and he knew the facts and he knew the theories, so he just put them together; whereas Feynman was always inventing things and he didn’t believe the theories that were taught in the textbooks, he had to make them up for himself, so he had a much harder time; but still, of course, in the end you need imagination too; I mean, both kinds of physicists are needed.
2.2. Brief History after Bethe’s Calculation
And as far as I know, this paper both disappointed and stimulated other people who were who were more versed in relativistic theory, namely Schwinger and Feynman… and also Weisskopf. Weisskopf pursued the theory in an old fashioned way and calculated the relativistic part, together with some of his collaborators. And Schwinger was stimulated to produce a completely new theory, relativistically invariant theory of quantum electrodynamics. But essentially extending the old quantum electrodynamics, making it relativistically invariant and so on… Feynman at Cornell used the completely novel and independent way of getting at the same problem. He had his own way of doing quantum mechanics, his own way of putting in the electric field. And it turned out that in the end that Feynman’s new way was very much easier than Schwinger’s way.
It is a strange irony of history that due to these difficulties it became common wisdom in the sixties that it was better to avoid separation of the contributions coming from different momenta regions than to try to invent an accurate matching procedure… Bjorken and Drell wrote, having in mind the separation procedure: ‘The reader may understandably be unhappy with this procedure… we recommend the recent treatment of Erickson and Yennie which avoids the division into soft and hard photons.’ Schwinger wrote ‘…there is a moral here for us. The artificial separation of high and low frequencies, which are handled in different ways, must be avoided.’ All this advice was written even though it was understood that the separation of the large and small distances was physically quite natural and the contributions coming from large and small distances have a different physical nature.
…the explanation of the Lamb shift is a far more orderly affair it is is consistently carried through within the framework of old-fashioned perturbation theory…the joining up of the low- and high- energy contributions does not involve any new physics: it is a simple mathematical device to enable the use of two distince approximation schemes [74].
2.3. Current Focus in Precision QED for Light Atoms
The shell game that we play..is technically called renormalization. But no matter how clever the word is, it is what I would call a dippy process! Having to resort to such hocus-pocus has prevented us from proving that the theory of quantum electrodynamics is mathematically self consistent [94].
3. Radiative Shifts, Classical Physics, and the Zero Point Fluctuations of the Electromagnetic Field
3.1. Background on QED Radiative Shift Calculations
electron with physical mass, charge and effective size of a Compton wavelength.
3.2. Radiative Effects in Classical Physics
3.2.1. Radiative Shifts in the Simple Harmonic Oscillator to Lowest Order
3.2.2. The Classical Hydrogen-like Atom
3.2.3. Comparison of Results for Harmonic Oscillator and Coulomb Potential
3.3. The Relationship between Radiative Shifts and the Zero Point Field
3.3.1. Observing Zero Point Vibrations of the Electron
3.3.2. General Nature of Radiative Shifts
4. The Radiative Shift In Field Theory
4.1. The Operator
4.2. Expressing the Radiative Shift in Terms of the Matrix Elements of the Operator
S Matrix Approach
4.3. Derivation of Operator for Relativistic Meson (Spinless Electron) in an External Potential
4.3.1. Detailed Derivation of Operator from Equations of Motion
4.3.2. The Expression for
4.3.3. Gauge Invariance of the Shift for a Relativistic Meson (Spinless Electron)
5. Calculation of the Radiative Shifts in the Nonrelativistic Approximation
5.1. Relationship to the Dipole Approximation
5.2. in the Nonrelativistic Dipole Approximation
5.2.1. Calculation of the Radiative Shift in the Nonrelativistic Limit
5.2.2. Radiative Shift for Physical Energy Levels
5.2.3. A Model to Interpret the Results
- (1)
- Re.
- (2)
- Re .
- (3)
- Im .
5.2.4. Two Examples: The Harmonic Oscillator and the Coulomb Potential
6. Radiative Shift of a Relativistic Meson (Spinless Electron) with a Harmonic Interaction Lagrangian
6.1. Introduction
6.2. Relativistic Radiative Shift for a Scalar Photon Interaction
6.3. Relativistic Radiative Shift for a Spin 1 Photon Interaction
7. Conclusions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Appendix A.1. Brief Biography of Willis Lamb Jr.
Appendix A.2. Brief Biography of Hans Bethe
References and Notes
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Maclay, G.J. History and Some Aspects of the Lamb Shift. Physics 2020, 2, 105-149. https://doi.org/10.3390/physics2020008
Maclay GJ. History and Some Aspects of the Lamb Shift. Physics. 2020; 2(2):105-149. https://doi.org/10.3390/physics2020008
Chicago/Turabian StyleMaclay, G. Jordan. 2020. "History and Some Aspects of the Lamb Shift" Physics 2, no. 2: 105-149. https://doi.org/10.3390/physics2020008
APA StyleMaclay, G. J. (2020). History and Some Aspects of the Lamb Shift. Physics, 2(2), 105-149. https://doi.org/10.3390/physics2020008