The 'classical electron radius', also known as the
Compton radius or the
Thomson scattering length is based on a classical (i.e., non-
quantum)
relativistic model of the
electron. Its value is calculated as
:
where
and
are the
electric charge and the
mass of the electron,
is the
speed of light, and
is the
permittivity of free space.
Using classical
electrostatics, the energy required to assemble a sphere of constant
charge density, of radius
and charge
is
:
.
If the charge is on the surface the energy is
:
.
Ignoring the factors 3/5 or 1/2, if this is equated to the relativistic energy of the electron (
) and solved for
, the above result is obtained.
In simple terms, the classical electron radius is roughly the size the electron would need to have for its mass to be completely due to its electrostatic potential energy - not taking quantum mechanics into account. We now know that quantum mechanics, indeed quantum field theory, is needed to understand the behavior of electrons at such short distance scales, thus the classical electron radius is no longer regarded as the actual size of an electron. In fact, modern
particle physics experiments indicate that the electron is a
point particle, i.e. it has no size and its radius is zero. Still, the classical electron radius is used in modern classical-limit theories involving the electron, such as non-relativistic
Thomson scattering and the relativistic
Klein-Nishina formula. Also, the classical electron radius is roughly the length scale at which
renormalization becomes important in
quantum electrodynamics.
The classical electron radius is one of a trio of related units of length, the other two being the
Bohr radius and the
Compton wavelength of the electron
. The classical electron radius is built from the
electron mass , the
speed of light and the
electron charge . The Bohr radius is built from
,
and
Planck's constant . The
Compton wavelength is built from
,
and
. Any one of these three lengths can be written in terms of any other using the fine structure constant
:
:
Extrapolating from the initial equation, any mass
can be imagined to have an 'electromagnetic radius' similar to the electron's classical radius.
:
where
is
Coulomb's constant,
is the
fine structure constant and
is
Planck's constant. Such a radius does not exist as a physical entity but it is sometimes useful in theoretical calculations.
References
★
CODATA value for the
classical electron radius at
NIST.
★ Arthur N. Cox, Ed. "Allen's Astrophysical Quantities", 4th Ed, Springer, 1999.
External links
★
Length Scales in Physics: the Classical Electron Radius