1. Introduction
The magnetic moment of the electron is one of the most precisely studied properties in physics. The electron’s intrinsic spin and its electric charge combine to produce a magnetic dipole moment expressed in terms of the dimensionless g-factor:
where
is the electron mass, e its charge, and
its spin angular momentum. Relativistic quantum mechanics as formulated by Paul Dirac predicts exactly
[
1]. This reflects the perfect symmetry of the Dirac equation linking spin and magnetic coupling. However, experiments reveal a small but fundamental deviation, an anomalous magnetic moment. Quantum electrodynamics (QED) accounts for this anomaly through radiative self-interaction, yielding the perturbative expansion
with
as first shown by Schwinger [
2] and higher-order coefficients computed in tenth-order QED [
3]. The current experimental value,
matches theoretical predictions to within a few parts in
[
4], representing one of the most precise agreements between theory and experiment in all of physics.
The numerical precision of this result is extraordinary, yet the deeper question remains: why does the symmetry implied by Dirac’s equation fail to hold exactly? In other words, what is the geometric or structural origin of the deviation?
Zitterbewegung and finite-extent models describe the electron as executing an internal helical motion or possessing a spatial spread of the order of its Compton wavelength, with spin and magnetic moment emerging from that geometry [
5,
6,
7]. Spacetime-torsion approaches, such as the Einstein-Cartan framework, ascribe the anomaly to intrinsic curvature or torsion of spacetime, producing small corrections to the Dirac equation at microscopic scales [
8,
9]. Stochastic and zero-point-field models regard the magnetic anomaly as the result of coupling between the electron and structured vacuum fluctuations, translating radiative corrections into real-space interactions [
10,
11,
12].
Each of these perspectives introduces geometric structure at a fundamental level, yet none provides a simple, closed-form mechanism that quantitatively reproduces the observed g-factor without auxiliary assumptions. The challenge is to retain the geometric intuition of these theories while achieving the same empirical precision that perturbative QED attains.
In the following sections we propose a geometric real-space model in which the anomalous g-factor is derived as the consequence of an extended charge–spin density interacting via a symmetric coupling kernel.
2. Symmetric Real-Space Model
We describe the intrinsic spatial profile of the electron by a spherically symmetric distribution
where σ is the characteristic spatial extent of the spin-carrying region. This function defines the probability weight of spin–magnetic interaction at radius r and ensures rapid convergence of all integrals. The parameter σ remains dimensionless in the normalized coordinates used here; its optimal value will later be determined by comparison with experiment.
Interaction between different regions of the extended density is mediated by a scalar, dimensionless kernel that describes the geometric coupling between two spherical layers. It is defined as which is symmetric under exchange and bounded between 0 and 0.25. This form favors constructive coupling between spatially commensurate regions while suppressing long-range mismatch. The kernel preserves rotational symmetry and introduces no free constants beyond the scaling of the coordinates.
The total magnetic-moment correction is expressed as a series of recursive convolutions of the density with itself through the coupling kernel. Each convolution order n yields a structural coefficient
, defined by:
and so forth. This recursive structure represents the cumulative geometric feedback of the spin distribution upon itself. The resulting expansion for the electron’s g-factor is identical in analytic form to the QED series as expressed in equation (2) but derived here from purely geometric self-interaction. No field quantization, renormalization, or cutoff is introduced; convergence is guaranteed by the Gaussian decay of
.
3. Numerical Results
All integrals were evaluated in spherical coordinates over the finite interval using standard numerical quadrature implemented in Python (SciPy) with a relative tolerance of . Numerical stability is ensured without regularization, because the kernel is dimensionless and analytic. The first two coefficients and are computed explicitly. Higher-order terms are estimated by fitting the growth of the known coefficients to an exponential relation where A and B are determined from the low-order results. This extrapolation reproduces the rapid convergence observed in the QED series while maintaining transparent geometric meaning.
The Gaussian decay of
ensures absolute convergence without regularization, and numerical stability was verified by doubling the grid resolution. Varying σ by ±1 % around the optimum changes the resulting g-factor by less than 0.3 ppm, confirming robustness of the integration. The geometric series defined by Equations (4)-(6) depends on the single dimensionless parameter
, which sets the effective radius of self-interaction. The function
was evaluated for
. A distinct minimum occurs at
where the deviation between theory and experiment is smallest. This value corresponds to the geometric saturation point of the Gaussian density, enclosing approximately 63 % of the integrated distribution. At
, the convolution integrals yield the structural coefficients
listed in
Table 1. These coefficients decrease monotonically with order, demonstrating rapid geometric convergence of the recursive coupling. A least-squares fit of the relation
for
gives the exponential parameters: A = 4.36 and B = 0.0722.
The rapid decrease of ensures that terms beyond sixth order contribute less than to the total g, well below current experimental precision. Using the CODATA 2022 fine-structure constant () and summing Eq. (2) up to n = 6 gives , in excellent agreement with the measured , a relative deviation of 1.9 ppm.
The formalism is dimensionless up to the reference length . Identifying with the reduced Compton wavelength of the electron, , anchors the model to a physical scale. The optimum extent therefore corresponds to implying that the self-interaction responsible for the anomaly is confined to a region comparable to the Compton wavelength—a physically natural and geometrically transparent result.
4. Discussion
4.1. Geometric Interpretation
The numerical result obtained in
Section 3 suggests that the anomalous magnetic moment can be understood as a structural property of a finite, symmetric distribution. The convolution series represents successive levels of geometric feedback. Each term describes how magnetic twist generated in one region of the density induces a secondary reaction in adjacent regions. This recursive coupling produces a small but cumulative shift in the effective ratio between spin and magnetic moment.
The emergence of the constant is notable. In a Gaussian profile, this value marks the radius enclosing roughly 63 % of the integrated density. At this point the internal and external contributions to the kernel balance, and further contraction or expansion yields diminishing change in total coupling. The anomaly therefore arises at the geometric saturation point of the symmetric density, where internal self-interaction becomes marginally asymmetric under inversion. This real-space asymmetry corresponds quantitatively to the deviation of g from 2. The geometric saturation represents the point where the perfect spin–magnetic symmetry of the Dirac equation becomes marginally violated by finite spatial extent.
4.2. Relation to Quantum Electrodynamics
In QED, the anomalous term results from virtual photon exchange and self-energy loops, mathematically encoded in the same power series in
. In the present model, the same hierarchy emerges from recursive geometric coupling without invoking field quantization. The identity of analytic form between Eq. (2) and the QED expansion suggests that perturbative diagrams may approximate an underlying geometric process, each loop integral corresponding to a convolution layer of self-interaction in real space. The correspondence of first-order coefficients confirms that both descriptions share a common local limit. The higher-order differences in sign and magnitude between
in
Table 1 may be interpreted as reflecting the different symmetries imposed by the kernel: the present model preserves strict radial invariance, whereas the full QED expansion includes parity-violating and tensor couplings. A kernel with weak angular or parity dependence may therefore bridge the residual discrepancy between geometric and perturbative coefficients.
4.3. Symmetry and Finite Extent
Dirac’s prediction
embodies an exact internal symmetry between spin and magnetic moment valid for a pointlike particle. Any deviation implies the existence of a finite extent or internal asymmetry breaking this ideal relation. The breaking occurs through self-coupling across the finite radius, providing a direct physical picture of how a nominally perfect symmetry acquires a small structural correction. The characteristic length emerging from the model,
, indicates that the dominant self-interaction occurs at the scale of the reduced Compton wavelength. This coincidence suggests that the geometric feedback captured by the convolution kernel may represent, in analytic form, the same intrinsic coupling between spin and spacetime curvature that underlies the Einstein–Cartan extension of the Dirac equation [
8,
9]. In both descriptions, the spin density produces a local modification of geometry; here it appears as a finite, symmetric back-reaction rather than as torsion of the affine connection. The quantitative match to the Compton scale may therefore hint at a shared geometric origin of the magnetic anomaly across these formalisms. Both frameworks therefore introduce intrinsic geometric feedback that regularizes self-interaction at the Compton scale—torsion in one case, Gaussian convolution in the other—ensuring finite energy density and convergence without external renormalization.
4.4. Conceptual Implications
The convergence of the geometric expansion, achieving part-per-million precision with only six terms, demonstrates that the effect is intrinsically bounded. As the Gaussian envelope limits the range of self-interaction, divergences do not arise. In this sense, the geometry enforces natural self-consistency. The model therefore offers an alternative interpretation of renormalization: what appears as mass and charge renormalization in QED may reflect the inherent saturation of geometric self-interaction in a finite system. Thus, the geometric formulation provides a finite, self-consistent alternative to radiative self-interaction, reproducing the measured anomaly without external regularization.
Further work may refine the kernel to include angular or parity-dependent terms, extend the method to the muon anomaly, and examine connections between geometric saturation and effective field renormalization. The results presented here suggest that the extraordinary precision of QED may be understood not only as a triumph of perturbation theory, but also as the numerical signature of an underlying geometric symmetry in the structure of the electron itself.
Supplementary Materials
The following supporting information can be downloaded at:
https://doi.org/10.17605/OSF.IO/RHXUY; File S1: g_factor_verify.py, the Python verification script that reproduces the numerical coefficients
, the fitted parameters A and B, and the partial-sum calculation of the g-factor; File S2: g_factor_coeffs_sigma_star.csv, tabulated values of the computed coefficients
–
and associated convergence parameters; File S3: g_factor_summary_sigma_star.csv, summary of the optimal scale
, grid resolution, and resulting
.
Funding
This research received no external funding.
Data Availability Statement
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Table 1.
Final geometric coefficients and QED coefficients (Eq. (2)).
Table 1.
Final geometric coefficients and QED coefficients (Eq. (2)).
|
Coefficients
|
Geometric Model 1
|
QED [3] |
|
0.5 |
0.5 |
|
|
− 0 .328 478 965 |
|
|
1 .181 241 456 |
|
|
− 1 .9106 (20) |
|
|
9 .16 (58) |
|
|
- |
|
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