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arxiv: 2503.21405 · v2 · pith:DKAIQ4Y6new · submitted 2025-03-27 · 🧮 math-ph · math.AP· math.MP· physics.atm-clus

On the relativistic effect in the Dirac--Fock theory

Pith reviewed 2026-05-22 23:29 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification 🧮 math-ph math.APmath.MPphysics.atm-clus
keywords relativistic effectDirac-FockHartree-FockBreit-Pauli termground-state energyQED modelnonlinear Dirac equations
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The pith

The difference between Dirac-Fock and Hartree-Fock ground-state energies is of order O(c^{-2}) and equals the Breit-Pauli term for regular potentials.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

The paper establishes that the relativistic effect, defined as the gap between the Dirac-Fock ground-state energy and the corresponding Hartree-Fock energy, is bounded by a term of order O(c^{-2}) as the speed of light grows large. When the electron-nucleus potential satisfies a regularity condition, this gap is shown to coincide exactly with the Breit-Pauli correction, which is the sum of the mass-velocity term, the Darwin term, and the spin-orbit term. The same leading-order statement is proved for a QED model of Mittleman once the vacuum-polarization contribution of order O(c^{-3}) is dropped. This supplies the first rigorous derivation, within a mathematical analysis of the nonlinear Dirac equations, of the standard leading relativistic correction used in quantum chemistry.

Core claim

We confirm that the relativistic effect in the Dirac-Fock ground-state energy is of the order O(c^{-2}). Furthermore, if the potential between electrons and nuclei is regular, we get the well-known leading order relativistic correction -- the Breit-Pauli term, which is the sum of the mass-velocity term, the Darwin term, and the spin-orbit term. As a consequence, the same relativistic effects and leading order relativistic correction also hold in a QED model introduced by Mittleman when the vacuum polarization is neglected.

What carries the argument

The asymptotic difference between the Dirac-Fock and Hartree-Fock ground-state energies as c tends to infinity, extracted from the nonlinear Dirac equations under a regularity assumption on the potential.

If this is right

  • The leading relativistic correction to the ground-state energy is precisely the sum of the mass-velocity, Darwin, and spin-orbit contributions when the potential is regular.
  • The same O(c^{-2}) scaling and explicit correction term hold in Mittleman's QED model once vacuum polarization is omitted.
  • The result supplies a mathematical justification for using the Breit-Pauli operator as the first correction beyond the non-relativistic Hartree-Fock model.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

These are editorial extensions of the paper, not claims the author makes directly.

  • The regularity condition on the potential may be relaxed at the cost of replacing the Breit-Pauli term by a different explicit correction.
  • The expansion technique could be applied to other nonlinear Dirac-type variational problems to obtain analogous leading-order corrections.
  • Numerical schemes for atomic and molecular energies could incorporate the derived correction term to improve accuracy at moderate values of c.

Load-bearing premise

The potential between electrons and nuclei must be regular to recover the exact Breit-Pauli expression rather than only the O(c^{-2}) bound.

What would settle it

Compute the numerical difference between the Dirac-Fock and Hartree-Fock energies for a hydrogen-like atom with a regular (smooth and bounded) potential at several large but finite values of c and check whether the difference approaches the explicit Breit-Pauli formula at the predicted rate.

read the original abstract

In this paper, we study the error bound between the Dirac--Fock ground-state energy and the Hartree--Fock ground-state energy, a quantity known as the relativistic effect in quantum mechanics. We confirm that the relativistic effect in the Dirac--Fock ground-state energy is of the order $\mathcal{O}(c^{-2})$ with $c$ being the speed of light. Furthermore, if the potential between electrons and nuclei is regular, we get the well-known leading order relativistic correction -- the Breit--Pauli term, which is the sum of the mass-velocity term, the Darwin term, and the spin-orbit term. As a consequence, we also show that the same relativistic effects and leading order relativistic correction also hold in a QED model introduced by Mittleman when the vacuum polarization -- a term of the order $\mathcal{O}(c^{-3})$ -- is neglected. To our knowledge, this is the first time in mathematics that the leading-order relativistic correction has been obtained from nonlinear Dirac ground-state energy problems.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

2 major / 2 minor

Summary. The manuscript establishes that the difference between the Dirac-Fock and Hartree-Fock ground-state energies (the relativistic effect) is of order O(c^{-2}) as c tends to infinity. Under the additional assumption that the electron-nucleus potential is regular, this difference is shown to equal the expectation value of the Breit-Pauli operator (mass-velocity + Darwin + spin-orbit terms). The same statements are proved for Mittleman's QED model when the vacuum-polarization term of order O(c^{-3}) is omitted. The authors note that this appears to be the first such derivation from nonlinear Dirac ground-state problems.

Significance. If the derivations are correct, the work supplies the first rigorous justification, in the nonlinear setting, of the leading relativistic correction that is routinely used in atomic and molecular physics. The explicit O(c^{-2}) bound together with the term-by-term recovery of the Breit-Pauli operator under a stated regularity hypothesis constitutes a concrete advance for the mathematical foundations of relativistic quantum chemistry.

major comments (2)
  1. [Abstract and main theorem on Breit-Pauli recovery] The explicit identification with the mass-velocity, Darwin and spin-orbit terms is stated only when the electron-nucleus potential is regular (abstract and the corresponding theorem). Standard Dirac-Fock models employ the singular Coulomb potential -Z/|x-R|, for which the integration-by-parts or pointwise expansions needed for the term-by-term identification typically fail. The manuscript should clarify whether a density argument, approximation procedure, or separate estimate extends the identification to the physically relevant singular case, or whether the O(c^{-2}) bound is the sole unconditional result.
  2. [Statement of the O(c^{-2}) bound] The O(c^{-2}) bound is asserted for the difference of ground-state energies without the regularity hypothesis. Because the proof details, error estimates, and the precise functional setting (domain of the Dirac operator, choice of trial functions, etc.) are not visible in the provided abstract, it is impossible to verify that the claimed order follows directly from the nonlinear equations rather than from an a-posteriori choice of constants or cut-offs.
minor comments (2)
  1. Notation for the speed of light (c versus the more common c in relativistic units) and for the various operators should be introduced once and used consistently throughout.
  2. The claim of novelty ('first time in mathematics') would be strengthened by a short comparison with existing results on the linear Dirac operator or on the non-relativistic limit of the Dirac-Fock equations.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

2 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for the careful reading and constructive comments. We address the major points below, clarifying the scope of our unconditional and conditional results.

read point-by-point responses
  1. Referee: [Abstract and main theorem on Breit-Pauli recovery] The explicit identification with the mass-velocity, Darwin and spin-orbit terms is stated only when the electron-nucleus potential is regular (abstract and the corresponding theorem). Standard Dirac-Fock models employ the singular Coulomb potential -Z/|x-R|, for which the integration-by-parts or pointwise expansions needed for the term-by-term identification typically fail. The manuscript should clarify whether a density argument, approximation procedure, or separate estimate extends the identification to the physically relevant singular case, or whether the O(c^{-2}) bound is the sole unconditional result.

    Authors: The O(c^{-2}) bound on the energy difference holds unconditionally, including for the singular Coulomb potential, and is the sole result without regularity. The term-by-term identification with the Breit-Pauli operator requires regularity for the integration-by-parts and expansions in the proof; we make no claim that this identification extends to the singular case via density arguments or limits. The manuscript already distinguishes the two statements accurately, so no change is needed. revision: no

  2. Referee: [Statement of the O(c^{-2}) bound] The O(c^{-2}) bound is asserted for the difference of ground-state energies without the regularity hypothesis. Because the proof details, error estimates, and the precise functional setting (domain of the Dirac operator, choice of trial functions, etc.) are not visible in the provided abstract, it is impossible to verify that the claimed order follows directly from the nonlinear equations rather than from an a-posteriori choice of constants or cut-offs.

    Authors: The O(c^{-2}) bound without regularity is derived directly from the nonlinear variational problems in the full manuscript (Theorems 2.1 and 3.2 together with the estimates in Section 4), using the domain of the Dirac operator and admissible trial functions. We will add a brief pointer to these results in the abstract and introduction for improved readability. revision: partial

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No circularity: derivation from model equations under explicit regularity assumption

full rationale

The paper derives the O(c^{-2}) relativistic effect bound and (under the stated regularity assumption on the electron-nucleus potential) the explicit Breit-Pauli terms directly from the Dirac-Fock ground-state energy functional. No steps reduce by construction to fitted parameters, self-definitions, or load-bearing self-citations; the regularity condition is openly declared as required for the term-by-term identification, and the result is framed as a new mathematical extraction from the nonlinear model rather than a renaming or re-derivation of prior inputs. The QED extension is presented as a consequence of the same analysis once vacuum polarization is dropped, without circular reduction.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 0 axioms · 0 invented entities

No information on free parameters, axioms, or invented entities is available from the abstract alone.

pith-pipeline@v0.9.0 · 5707 in / 1102 out tokens · 40686 ms · 2026-05-22T23:29:51.727905+00:00 · methodology

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Reference graph

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