Abstract
A theoretical investigation is made of the spatial displacements of a Dirac electron which undergoes a series of total internal reflections from finite potential barriers of arbitrary smoothness. These displacements are analogous to the shifts observed for optical total reflection (the Goos-H\"anchen effect). For an electron, the polarization states that are invariant to a single-reflection process are identified and the change in polarization for an arbitrary incident polarized state is determined. A calculation of longitudinal and transverse shifts is made for a double-reflection process from surfaces with a specified orientation. This calculation is based on a phase-shift analysis in which a localization form-invariance argument for the wave packet is used to determine both the eigenpolarization states of the double-reflection process and the relevant phase shifts. An unpolarized beam of electrons will be spatially split into these geometry-dependent eigenpolarization states. In general, it is found that the total spatial displacement of the wave-packet center for each eigenstate consists of two parts, each of which has longitudinal and transverse components. There is a common shift (dependent on the potential) which near critical reflection is of the order of the de Broglie wavelength, and a polarization-dependent shift (independent of the potential) that causes a split that is at most of the order of a Compton wavelength. There is no splitting for reflections between parallel surfaces. In principle, a macroscopically observable common shift can be produced through multiple reflections.
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