In the hope of finding some stable behaviour, we extend the problem without spoiling its analytical solvability. We consider the presence of a “radially-directed dipolar force”, stemming from a potential , which has the same form as the angular momentum part of the kinetic energy. Such a term may arise from a dipolar force between electron and nucleus, when the deformation of the nucleus, caused by the electron, is always aligned with the vector between them.
3.1. Analysing the Orbits
In our classical dynamics approach the unperturbed problem has potential
V and Newton force
while the random force and the damping lead to the dynamics
For an unperturbed orbit with energy
the radial parametrization is still
coded by its eccentricity
. The presence of
d in Equation (
38) now leads to the connections
so that now
. The range of
ε and
κ is, due to the shape of Equation (
40), at most the interval (0,1). In the repulsive case
, the physical ranges are
, and both
ε and
λ range from 0 to
; then the condition
implies that the orbital energy is bounded from below, viz.
.
For the attractive dipolar force,
,
ε and
κ indeed range between 0 and 1, while
λ takes values between
and
. However, now there is a second family of orbits having
, where
and
(because
). While such orbit are hyperbolic (unbound) for
, they are bound for
:
these low-angular momentum orbits spiral into and and then out of the nucleus and need to be described within a relativistic framework [
12]. This property may explain the Darwin term (a
term) in the relativistic corrections to the H ground state, related to our problem with
, as an effect of central spiralling.
The relation
now brings for orbits with
One period in
a still takes a time
, but it involves
μ turns in
ϕ, where
μ is in general non-integer. For
each
ϕ-turn takes the shorter time
, so although the solution
remains,
rotates faster. For
it rotates slower. For
,
and
do not reduce to compact forms like Equation (
7).
With
, the rate of energy loss from Equation (
32) generalises to
The result is obtained using the properties Equation (
40) of the orbit.
If
the orbits with
the orbits spiral into and out of the centre. They are described by the same solution, after adding absolute values to keep
and
positive,
3.2. Perturbations of the Orbit
The equations for perturbations
now read on the comoving basis
The homogeneous solutions are still explicit,
where also
picks up a secular term. Indeed,
and
increase indefinitely with time,
with
a periodic function in
a.
The sum rule for the arctangent,
, implies
It decomposes as with and periodic.
The solution Equations (
13) and (
18) remains valid with transverse sector
3.3. Statistical Rate of Energy Change from the Stochastic Field
For the field contribution to the energy change we have to inspect the behaviour for
. While for
the problematic terms cancel, the problem is real for
. The terms now add up to
To have a well defined
limit, this should be regularised. Technically it can be done by adding at fixed
t a contribution to the
s-integral, which itself does not contribute to
at finite
:
For the subtraction of the next order term, we point out that it yields a divergency, which vanishes when integrating over a full orbit.
3.4. Circular Orbits
At
the cubic term of Equation (
50) vanishes, so after accounting for Equation (
51) the problem is regular. For
the maximal
k is
. The total energy loss rate is
which prevents the result passing below the lowest energy coded by
and
. For small
k and hence
, the loss term dominates, exhibiting de la Peña-Puthoff stability of the atom.
At small k this always shows the stability . For large-k the stability condition demands that , a condition met curiously already in the quantum approach. So the dipole force does not essentially modify the stability of circular orbits.
In conclusion, for circular orbits the H-atom retains its de la Peña-Puthoff stability in the presence of the potential.
3.5. Very Eccentric Orbits
The
case (pure hydrogen problem) taught us that the remaining interest lies in the limit of very eccentric orbits with energy close to zero, where the possibility of self-ionisation looms. In the limit
and small
, we set
,
, with the relation
from Equations (
40) and (
42). Expressed in angular momentum
L, Equation (
42) gave
, so that
.
As usual, the easy part is the loss term, which can be taken directly from Equation (
43). It scales as
, which implies in the limit
a finite contribution per period
, as before,
The energy gain from the field during one period is
We scale
,
. Similar to Equation (
37) of the case
, there results per period a finite limit of the energy gain,
Even in this scaling limit this involves a lengthy expression,
with
and numerators
and the common denominator
For the regulator needed to cancel the
term in Equation (
50) we may take
Indeed, when integrating it over
y, a logarithmically divergent term appears, but the result vanishes over a full period,
i.e., upon integration over
x. Both gain and loss terms being proportional to
implies that per period
there appears, averaged over disorder and over a period, an energy change
Inserting
, this becomes a function of
μ alone,
Self-ionisation is likely prevented when for all orbits, that is, for all relevant μ. In the repulsive case the range for μ is . Since and , our statistical argument suggest a stable bound state for . This is finite, though rather large.
For
the physical domain is
and
. For
we find that
is an increasing function. Its asymptotic behaviour can be analyzed. The limit
describes the orbits with lowest possible angular momentum
,
. We can scale
. (The leading and subleading terms in
can just be evaluated; for the second order correction a regularisation is needed, a subtraction of total derivatives of the form
, with coefficients that depend on
u.) This ends up with
With this shape of
, Equation (64) predicts that these orbits remain stable only for the extremal value
, but then Equation (
53) predicts that spherical orbits sink to the centre, so no stable cases are found for
. The role of orbits spiralling into and out of the centre (the regime
) is left as an open question.
3.6. Quantum Mechanics
In a quantum approach one would introduce the angular momentum operator and an effective one, , the latter taking the eigenvalues for , so that . For the ground state the value imposes that .
The nonrelativistic Schrödinger equation for the radial wave function
reads
For
it has an analogy with the Schrödinger equation for the spinless relativistic electron in an H-atom [
13]. Indeed, it produces the Dirac square-root formula for the eigenenergies, be it that the total angular momentum operator
for the spinning electron is reduced to
and hence its eigenvalues
. The ground state is
It is normalised according to . For the relativistic “Klein Gordon” H atom, affects only the relativistic corrections; here we shall keep d as a parameter of order unity, positive or negative.
3.7. Classical Phase Space Density
If a stationary ground state exists in the SED problem, it should be expressable as a function of the conserved quantities
and
L, more precisely, as functions of
and
. Since this task was worked out by us for the ground state and excited states of the relativistic hydrogen atom [
13], we can adjust the approach here. For Equation (67) we coin the shape
Let us verify this and fix the normalisation
C; the result will be given in Equation (73). The value of the Hamiltonian
allows to denote the radial velocity
and the effective angular momentum
as
The fact that
rather than
L itself enters here will imply its presence in Equation (68). (The angle
μ is this section should not be confused with the short hand
in the remainder of the text.) As this implies
, the volume element in momentum space, with
the azimuthal angle, reads
Using
, we have
Comparing with
from Equation (67) we see that it has the proper shape, with
Another quantity of interest is the distribution function of the conserved quantities
and
L or
. As worked out in Equations (47)–(49) of Ref. [
8], the relation between
and
is
With
, this becomes
which is normalised to unity, when taking all
and
.
Despite the setback for the SED program for and all , it would be interesting to test this distribution for the regime where a stable ground state of the problem should occur.