Inverse square potential

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In quantum mechanics, the inverse square potential is a form of a central force potential which has the unusual property of the eigenstates of the corresponding Hamiltonian operator remaining eigenstates in a scaling of all cartesian coordinates by the same constant.[1] Apart from this curious feature, it's by far less important central force problem than that of the Keplerian inverse square force system.

Description

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The potential energy function of an inverse square potential is

V(r)=Cr2,

where C is some constant and r is the Euclidean distance from some central point. If C is positive, the potential is attractive and if C is negative, the potential is repulsive. The corresponding Hamiltonian operator H^(𝐩^,r^) is

H^=𝐩^22mCr^2,

where m is the mass of the particle moving in the potential.

Properties

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The canonical commutation relation of quantum mechanics, [x^i,p^i]=i, has the property of being invariant in a scaling

p^i=p^i/λ, and x^i=λx^i,

where λ is some scaling factor. The momentum 𝐩 and the position 𝐱 are vectors, while the components pi,xi and the radius r are scalars. In an inverse square potential system, if a wavefunction ψ(r) is an eigenfunction of the Hamiltonian operator H^(𝐩^,𝐱^), it is also an eigenfunction of the operator H^(𝐩^,𝐱^), where the scaled operators p^i and x^i are defined as above.

This also means that if a radially symmetric wave function ψ(r) is an eigenfunction of H^ with eigenvalue E, then also ψ(λr) is an eigenfunction, with eigenvalue λ2E. Therefore, the energy spectrum of the system is a continuum of values.

The system with a particle in an inverse square potential with positive C (attractive potential) is an example of so-called falling-to-center problem, where there is no lowest energy wavefunction and there are eigenfunctions where the particle is arbitrarily localized in the vicinity of the central point r=0.[2]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Lua error in Module:Citation/CS1/Configuration at line 2172: attempt to index field '?' (a nil value).
  2. ^ Lua error in Module:Citation/CS1/Configuration at line 2172: attempt to index field '?' (a nil value).