26,507 research outputs found
Model of supersymmetric quantum field theory with broken parity symmetry
Recently, it was observed that self-interacting scalar quantum field theories
having a non-Hermitian interaction term of the form ,
where is a real positive parameter, are physically acceptable in the
sense that the energy spectrum is real and bounded below. Such theories possess
PT invariance, but they are not symmetric under parity reflection or time
reversal separately. This broken parity symmetry is manifested in a nonzero
value for , even if is an even integer. This paper extends
this idea to a two-dimensional supersymmetric quantum field theory whose
superpotential is . The resulting quantum
field theory exhibits a broken parity symmetry for all . However,
supersymmetry remains unbroken, which is verified by showing that the
ground-state energy density vanishes and that the fermion-boson mass ratio is
unity.Comment: 20 pages, REVTeX, 11 postscript figure
Dual PT-Symmetric Quantum Field Theories
Some quantum field theories described by non-Hermitian Hamiltonians are
investigated. It is shown that for the case of a free fermion field theory with
a mass term the Hamiltonian is -symmetric. Depending on the
mass parameter this symmetry may be either broken or unbroken. When the symmetry is unbroken, the spectrum of the quantum field theory is real. For
the -symmetric version of the massive Thirring model in
two-dimensional space-time, which is dual to the -symmetric scalar
Sine-Gordon model, an exact construction of the operator is given. It
is shown that the -symmetric massive Thirring and Sine-Gordon models
are equivalent to the conventional Hermitian massive Thirring and Sine-Gordon
models with appropriately shifted masses.Comment: 9 pages, 1 figur
Semiclassical Calculation of the C Operator in PT-Symmetric Quantum Mechanics
To determine the Hilbert space and inner product for a quantum theory defined
by a non-Hermitian -symmetric Hamiltonian , it is necessary to
construct a new time-independent observable operator called . It has
recently been shown that for the {\it cubic} -symmetric
Hamiltonian one can obtain as a
perturbation expansion in powers of . This paper considers the more
difficult case of noncubic Hamiltonians of the form
(). For these Hamiltonians it is shown how to calculate
by using nonperturbative semiclassical methods.Comment: 11 pages, 1 figur
Introduction to PT-Symmetric Quantum Theory
In most introductory courses on quantum mechanics one is taught that the
Hamiltonian operator must be Hermitian in order that the energy levels be real
and that the theory be unitary (probability conserving). To express the
Hermiticity of a Hamiltonian, one writes , where the symbol
denotes the usual Dirac Hermitian conjugation; that is, transpose and
complex conjugate. In the past few years it has been recognized that the
requirement of Hermiticity, which is often stated as an axiom of quantum
mechanics, may be replaced by the less mathematical and more physical
requirement of space-time reflection symmetry (PT symmetry) without losing any
of the essential physical features of quantum mechanics. Theories defined by
non-Hermitian PT-symmetric Hamiltonians exhibit strange and unexpected
properties at the classical as well as at the quantum level. This paper
explains how the requirement of Hermiticity can be evaded and discusses the
properties of some non-Hermitian PT-symmetric quantum theories
WKB Analysis of PT-Symmetric Sturm-Liouville problems
Most studies of PT-symmetric quantum-mechanical Hamiltonians have considered
the Schroedinger eigenvalue problem on an infinite domain. This paper examines
the consequences of imposing the boundary conditions on a finite domain. As is
the case with regular Hermitian Sturm-Liouville problems, the eigenvalues of
the PT-symmetric Sturm-Liouville problem grow like for large .
However, the novelty is that a PT eigenvalue problem on a finite domain
typically exhibits a sequence of critical points at which pairs of eigenvalues
cease to be real and become complex conjugates of one another. For the
potentials considered here this sequence of critical points is associated with
a turning point on the imaginary axis in the complex plane. WKB analysis is
used to calculate the asymptotic behaviors of the real eigenvalues and the
locations of the critical points. The method turns out to be surprisingly
accurate even at low energies.Comment: 11 pages, 8 figure
Quantum tunneling as a classical anomaly
Classical mechanics is a singular theory in that real-energy classical
particles can never enter classically forbidden regions. However, if one
regulates classical mechanics by allowing the energy E of a particle to be
complex, the particle exhibits quantum-like behavior: Complex-energy classical
particles can travel between classically allowed regions separated by potential
barriers. When Im(E) -> 0, the classical tunneling probabilities persist.
Hence, one can interpret quantum tunneling as an anomaly. A numerical
comparison of complex classical tunneling probabilities with quantum tunneling
probabilities leads to the conjecture that as ReE increases, complex classical
tunneling probabilities approach the corresponding quantum probabilities. Thus,
this work attempts to generalize the Bohr correspondence principle from
classically allowed to classically forbidden regions.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figure
Variational Ansatz for PT-Symmetric Quantum Mechanics
A variational calculation of the energy levels of a class of PT-invariant
quantum mechanical models described by the non-Hermitian Hamiltonian H= p^2 -
(ix)^N with N positive and x complex is presented. Excellent agreement is
obtained for the ground state and low lying excited state energy levels and
wave functions. We use an energy functional with a three parameter class of
PT-symmetric trial wave functions in obtaining our results.Comment: 9 pages -- one postscript figur
Complex periodic potentials with real band spectra
This paper demonstrates that complex PT-symmetric periodic potentials possess
real band spectra. However, there are significant qualitative differences in
the band structure for these potentials when compared with conventional real
periodic potentials. For example, while the potentials V(x)=i\sin^{2N+1}(x),
(N=0, 1, 2, ...), have infinitely many gaps, at the band edges there are
periodic wave functions but no antiperiodic wave functions. Numerical analysis
and higher-order WKB techniques are used to establish these results.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figures, LaTe
Multiple-Scale Analysis of the Quantum Anharmonic Oscillator
Conventional weak-coupling perturbation theory suffers from problems that
arise from resonant coupling of successive orders in the perturbation series.
Multiple-scale perturbation theory avoids such problems by implicitly
performing an infinite reordering and resummation of the conventional
perturbation series. Multiple-scale analysis provides a good description of the
classical anharmonic oscillator. Here, it is extended to study the Heisenberg
operator equations of motion for the quantum anharmonic oscillator. The
analysis yields a system of nonlinear operator differential equations, which is
solved exactly. The solution provides an operator mass renormalization of the
theory.Comment: 12 pages, Revtex, no figures, available through anonymous ftp from
ftp://euclid.tp.ph.ic.ac.uk/papers/ or on WWW at
http://euclid.tp.ph.ic.ac.uk/Papers/papers_95-6_.htm
Faster than Hermitian Time Evolution
For any pair of quantum states, an initial state |I> and a final quantum
state |F>, in a Hilbert space, there are many Hamiltonians H under which |I>
evolves into |F>. Let us impose the constraint that the difference between the
largest and smallest eigenvalues of H, E_max and E_min, is held fixed. We can
then determine the Hamiltonian H that satisfies this constraint and achieves
the transformation from the initial state to the final state in the least
possible time \tau. For Hermitian Hamiltonians, \tau has a nonzero lower bound.
However, among non-Hermitian PT-symmetric Hamiltonians satisfying the same
energy constraint, \tau can be made arbitrarily small without violating the
time-energy uncertainty principle. The minimum value of \tau can be made
arbitrarily small because for PT-symmetric Hamiltonians the path from the
vector |I> to the vector |F>, as measured using the Hilbert-space metric
appropriate for this theory, can be made arbitrarily short. The mechanism
described here is similar to that in general relativity in which the distance
between two space-time points can be made small if they are connected by a
wormhole. This result may have applications in quantum computing.Comment: This is a contribution to the Proc. of the Seventh International
Conference ''Symmetry in Nonlinear Mathematical Physics'' (June 24-30, 2007,
Kyiv, Ukraine), published in SIGMA (Symmetry, Integrability and Geometry:
Methods and Applications) at http://www.emis.de/journals/SIGMA
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