qsa
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What is the relativitic correction to the e^2/r coulomb law without spin between two electrons.second order is enough.
dextercioby said:Second order in what ? Standard references mention a correction proportional to the 4th power of momentum, if the electron's and the proton's spin are neglected.
Vanadium 50 said:Why would electron-electron have a different functional form than electron-proton?
What is the relativistic correction to the e^2/r coulomb law?
Bill_K said:To the next order, V(r) = -(Ze2/4π)1/r - (Ze4/60π2m2) δ(r)
I know the delta function looks weird, like it was something just stuck in by hand. But that's really the result. It looks more sensible in momentum space, where
V(k) ~ k-2 (1 - (e2/60π2m2) k2 + ...)
and the Fourier transform of the second term is the Fourier transform of 1, which is a delta function.
unusualname said:I think you're looking for something like this qsa
Effective Field Theory of Gravity: Leading Quantum Gravitational Corrections to Newtons and Coulombs Law
where the first order correction is shown to be an additional
3G(m1+m2)/(r*c^2)
(multiplied by the classical coloumb term)
(obviously m1=m2 for the electron, and r is the separation)
But, personally, I would give up running naive random models in the hope of getting physical laws, you'll go crazy. If your new model matches this formula it's still not a big deal, especially not if you don't explain how it's constrained in a coherent and simple manner.
qsa said:This is another story for another time since these corrections are out of reach of experiment. Bill_K gave the correct answer. As for my model ,you know I cannot talk about it here, I will send you an email soon with the latest results(maybe alpha up to eight digits).