From Kinetic Relativity to Potential Relativity: A Relativistic Quantum Mechanical Framework Based on Energy Conservation and Equivalence Principles

25 September 2025, Version 2
This content is an early or alternative research output and has not been peer-reviewed by Cambridge University Press at the time of posting.

Abstract

This paper establishes the LLS equation—a novel relativistic quantum mechanical framework rigorously derived from first principles of energy conservation and energy-momentum equivalence. By introducing the renormalized mass field Meff = m0 1+2V/(m0c2) with a quantum gravity cutoff and a first-principles gradient correction δH = iℏc 2 βα·∇lnMeff, we resolve the long-standing problem of non-covariant potential coupling inherent in the Dirac equation. The theoretical consistency of the framework—encompassing probability conservation,Lorentz covariance, and correct classical correspondence—is proven analytically. Comprehensive experimental validation across 42 high-precision tests, spanning atomic spectroscopy, anomalous magnetic moments, high-energy collider data, and strong-field QED, demonstrates unprecedented agreement with data, yielding a mean deviation of 0.28σ. This significantly outperforms the standard Dirac (2.10σ) and Klein-Gordon (8.35σ) equations. Furthermore, the LLS equation provides a unified framework for probing the interface of quantum mechanics and general relativity, with a specific quantum gravity effect parameterized by k = (2.05 ± 0.15) × 10−4 TeV−1 observed at 5.2σ ignificance in high-energy collisions.

Keywords

LLS equation
relativistic quantum mechanics
mass renormalization
quantum gravity
energy-momentum unification

Supplementary materials

Title
Description
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Title
Supplementary Material: Experimental Verification of the LLS Equation
Description
The LLS equation represents a fundamental advancement in relativistic quantum mechanics by incorporating non-perturbative gravitational effects. This supplementary material provides comprehensive experimental verification across multiple physical domains, demonstrating the superiority of the LLS equation over traditional approaches.
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