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In this Wikipedia page there's a statement about 1S orbital as solved from Dirac equation:

Note that $\gamma$ is a little less than $1$, so the top function is similar to an exponentially decreasing function of $r$ except that at very small $r$ it theoretically goes to infinity (but this behavior appears at a value of $r$ smaller than the radius of a proton!).

For comparison, when solving radial part of Schrödinger's equation for hydrogen, we explicitly strive to avoid solution which is singular at the singular point of potential.

In Dirac equation it seems that the only justification of allowing unbounded solution is a physical one, not mathematical. It looks very inconsistent with what I've seen when solving various problems with Schrödinger's equation.

So why is Dirac equation's solution allowed to be unbounded? What are the boundary and smoothness conditions on the wavefunction?

I suspect that Dirac equation simply doesn't admit S states with bounded wavefunction in Coulomb potential. Can it then be shown that if we start from a spherically-symmetric wave packet with a zero in its center, then its evolution in Coulomb field will inevitably lead to formation of similar $r^{\gamma-1}$ singularity?

Ruslan
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The whole idea of always looking for non-singular solution of a PDE when solving physical problem is flawed. There are legitimate cases when a singular solution does solve the equation and satisfies all the boundary conditions originally imposed on it — and — solves the physical problem as well.

Similarly, the condition of square integrability of wavefunction, mentioned in akhmeteli's answer, is not enough to get e.g. discrete energy spectrum of a bound particle. Consider e.g. spherical/cylindrical Neumann function as a solution of radial equation for a particle in spherical/cylindrical box with constant potential inside. Such a solution is square integrable with corresponding Jacobian, but clearly results in continuous energy spectrum if we take it as a solution of such a problem.

What we should look for is the solution which solves the PDE as a distribution. Namely, it must take into account all distributional singularities like Dirac delta arising when applying the differential operator to it. As an example, consider spherical Neumann function as a candidate solution for the problem mentioned above for S state. It has the following series expansion:

$$y_0(r)=-\frac1r+\frac r2-\frac {r^3}{24}+\cdots.$$

It's easy to see that it's normalizable when integrated in the box of radius $R$, since the Jacobian $r^2$ cancels the $\frac1{r^2}$ term in $y_0(r)^2$. But this function has a serious problem: applying the kinetic energy operator to it yields a Dirac delta, which isn't compensated by anything in the equation. It becomes obvious if you consider that $\frac1r$ is (up to a constant factor) a solution of Poisson's equation for point charge. Another way to see it is to verify that

$$\lim_{\varepsilon\to0}\int_{\mathbb R^3}\nabla^2\left(\frac1{\sqrt{r^2+\varepsilon^2}}\right)\,\mathrm dV\ne0,$$

recalling the definition of Dirac delta distribution.

To summarize: the premise of the question is false: we don't try to avoid singular solution to Schrödinger's or other similar equations — we try to make sure that our solution solves our equation in a distributional sense, not leaving any stray distributional singularities. Thus it's completely OK to allow solutions of Dirac equation to be unbounded, provided that they do solve it exactly as distributions.

Ruslan
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I would say the bound state solution should have integrable probability density near the center, which condition does hold (a factor of $r^2$ appears when you integrate in the spherical coordinates), although the wave function (and the probability density) is indeed singular. This condition is used at page 20 of the article @LewisMiller refers to in a comment ("Schrödinger and Dirac equations for the hydrogen atom, and Laguerre polynomials").

akhmeteli
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  • This condition doesn't seem to be enough for Schrödinger's hydrogen: there we can have an integrable probability density even with non-eigen-energies, since the singularity at the origin is also easily cancelled by $r^2$ weight. This is the core of my question: what is so different in Dirac equation that this condition of integrability instead of regularity is valid? – Ruslan Nov 17 '16 at 06:51
  • @Ruslan: Could you give a reference? – akhmeteli Nov 17 '16 at 07:06
  • I don't have a reference, but you can see how I arrived at the comment. First, if you solve the radial Schrödinger's equation, you'll get two terms with Kummer and Tricomi confluent hypergeometric functions: one term with $_1F_1$, which in general is unbounded at infinity, but bounded at origin, and another with $U$, which vanishes at infinity, but is unbounded at origin. At non-integer $n$ the second term has series expansion with leading terms of $c+a/r+b\log r$ (see e.g. W|A, which are integrable. – Ruslan Nov 17 '16 at 09:28
  • @Ruslan: Looks like you consider some solutions of the time-independent equation, so they have some definite energy. What do you mean by "non-eigen-energies"? – akhmeteli Nov 17 '16 at 10:06
  • Yes, I consider time-independent Schrödinger's equation. Non-eigen-energies are those coefficients for radial Hamiltonian, which are in the RHS of the equation in place of eigenvalues, but aren't equal to any actual eigenvalue — i.e. if we say $H_r f(r)=-n^{-2}f(r)$, then I consider the case of $n\not\in\mathbb N$. This is the case when $f$ doesn't satisfy boundary conditions of boundedness. – Ruslan Nov 17 '16 at 10:13
  • @Ruslan: So it looks like this is your own definition of "non-eigen-energy". If you have a normalisable solution (even if unbounded one), what's wrong with the relevant energy? (I don't know, maybe that energy is not negative, but that does not mean it is not physical). – akhmeteli Nov 17 '16 at 10:20
  • Suppose you insert non-integer principal quantum number into Bohr's formula for hydrogen energies. You'll get the value which I call "non-eigen-energy". But you can still find a wavefunction with this energy, which, despite being singular at the origin, is normalizable. – Ruslan Nov 17 '16 at 10:27
  • @Ruslan: So maybe there is nothing wrong with this wave function and this energy? Why is it "non-eigen"? – akhmeteli Nov 17 '16 at 10:32