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Exact solutions of the Dirac equation, a system of four partial differential equations, are rare. The vast majority of them are for highly symmetric stationary systems. Moreover, only a handful of solutions for time dependent dynamics exists. Given the growing number of applications of high energy electron beams interacting with a variety of quantum systems in laser fields, novel methods for finding exact solutions to the Dirac equation are called for. We present a method for building up solutions to the Dirac equation employing a recently introduced approach for the description of spinorial fields and their driving electromagnetic fields in terms of geometric algebras. We illustrate the method by developing several stationary as well as non-stationary solutions of the Dirac equation with well defined orbital angular momentum along the electrons propagation direction. The first set of solutions describe free electron beams in terms of Bessel functions as well as stationary solutions for both a homogeneous and an inhomogeneous magnetic field. The second set of solutions are new and involve a plane electromagnetic wave combined with a generally inhomogeneous longitudinal magnetic field. Moreover, the developed technique allows us to derive general physical properties of the dynamics in such field configurations, as well as provides physical predictions on the self-consistent electromagnetic fields induced by the dynamics.
We analyze propagation of acoustic vortex beams in longitudinal synthetic magnetic fields. We show how to generate two field configurations using a fluid contained in circulating cylinders: a uniform synthetic magnetic field hosting Laguerre-Gauss mo
Angular momentum plays a central role in a multitude of phenomena in quantum mechanics, recurring in every length scale from the microscopic interactions of light and matter to the macroscopic behavior of superfluids. Vortex beams, carrying intrinsic
Improving axial resolution is of paramount importance for three-dimensional optical imaging systems. Here, we investigate the ultimate precision in axial localization using vortex beams. For Laguerre-Gauss beams, this limit can be achieved with just
Light beams having a vectorial field structure - or polarization - that varies over the transverse profile and a central optical singularity are called vector-vortex (VV) beams and may exhibit specific properties, such as focusing into light needles
Chiral perturbation theory makes definitive predictions for the extrinsic behavior of hadrons in external electric and magnetic fields. Near the chiral limit, the electric and magnetic polarizabilities of pions, kaons, and nucleons are determined in