Abstract

We study the behavior of solutions of the Dirac–Maxwell system (DM) in the nonrelativistic limit c → ∞, where c is the speed of light. DM is a nonlinear system of PDEs obtained by coupling the Dirac equation for a 4-spinor to the Maxwell equations for the self-consistent field created by the moving charge of the spinor. The limit c → ∞, sometimes also called post-Newtonian, yields a Schrödinger–Poisson system, where the spin and magnetic field no longer appear. We prove that DM is locally well-posed for H1 data (for fixed c), and that as c → ∞ the existence time grows at least as fast as log(c), provided the data are uniformly bounded in H1. Moreover, if the datum for the Dirac spinor converges in H1, then the solution of DM converges, modulo a phase correction, in C([0,T];H1) to a solution of a Schrödinger–Poisson system. Our results also apply to a mixed state formulation of DM, and give also a convergence result for the Pauli equation as the "semi-nonrelativistic" limit. The proof relies on modifications of the bilinear null form estimates of Klainerman and Machedon, and extends our previous work on the nonrelativistic limit of the Klein–Gordon–Maxwell system.

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