117 research outputs found

    Wall-crossing structures in Donaldson-Thomas invariants, integrable systems and Mirror Symmetry

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    We introduce the notion of Wall-Crossing Structure and discuss it in several examples including complex integrable systems, Donaldson-Thomas invariants and Mirror Symmetry. For a big class of non-compact Calabi-Yau 3-folds we construct complex integrable systems of Hitchin type with the base given by the moduli space of deformations of those 3-folds. Then Donaldson-Thomas invariants of the Fukaya category of such a Calabi-Yau 3-fold can be (conjecturally) described in two more ways: in terms of the attractor flow on the base of the corresponding complex integrable system and in terms of the skeleton of the mirror dual to the total space of the integrable system. The paper also contains a discussion of some material related to the main subject, e.g. Betti model of Hitchin systems with irregular singularities, WKB asymptotics of connections depending on a small parameter, attractor points in the moduli space of complex structures of a compact Calabi-Yau 3-fold, relation to cluster varieties, etc.Comment: 111 pages, accepted for Proceedings of the Cetraro Conference "Mirror Symmetry and Tropical Geometry" (Lecture Notes in Mathematics

    Convergence Radii for Eigenvalues of Tri--diagonal Matrices

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    Consider a family of infinite tri--diagonal matrices of the form L+zB,L+ zB, where the matrix LL is diagonal with entries Lkk=k2,L_{kk}= k^2, and the matrix BB is off--diagonal, with nonzero entries Bk,k+1=Bk+1,k=kα,0α<2.B_{k,{k+1}}=B_{{k+1},k}= k^\alpha, 0 \leq \alpha < 2. The spectrum of L+zBL+ zB is discrete. For small z|z| the nn-th eigenvalue En(z),En(0)=n2,E_n (z), E_n (0) = n^2, is a well--defined analytic function. Let RnR_n be the convergence radius of its Taylor's series about z=0.z= 0. It is proved that R_n \leq C(\alpha) n^{2-\alpha} \quad \text{if} 0 \leq \alpha <11/6.$

    An exact solution method for 1D polynomial Schr\"odinger equations

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    Stationary 1D Schr\"odinger equations with polynomial potentials are reduced to explicit countable closed systems of exact quantization conditions, which are selfconsistent constraints upon the zeros of zeta-regularized spectral determinants, complementing the usual asymptotic (Bohr--Sommerfeld) constraints. (This reduction is currently completed under a certain vanishing condition.) In particular, the symmetric quartic oscillators are admissible systems, and the formalism is tested upon them. Enforcing the exact and asymptotic constraints by suitable iterative schemes, we numerically observe geometric convergence to the correct eigenvalues/functions in some test cases, suggesting that the output of the reduction should define a contractive fixed-point problem (at least in some vicinity of the pure q4q^4 case).Comment: flatex text.tex, 4 file

    Two-parametric PT-symmetric quartic family

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    We describe a parametrization of the real spectral locus of the two-parametric family of PT-symmetric quartic oscillators. For this family, we find a parameter region where all eigenvalues are real, extending the results of Dorey, Dunning, Tateo and Shin.Comment: 23 pages, 15 figure

    Universal behavior of quantum Green's functions

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    We consider a general one-particle Hamiltonian H = - \Delta_r + u(r) defined in a d-dimensional domain. The object of interest is the time-independent Green function G_z(r,r') = . Recently, in one dimension (1D), the Green's function problem was solved explicitly in inverse form, with diagonal elements of Green's function as prescribed variables. The first aim of this paper is to extract from the 1D inverse solution such information about Green's function which cannot be deduced directly from its definition. Among others, this information involves universal, i.e. u(r)-independent, behavior of Green's function close to the domain boundary. The second aim is to extend the inverse formalism to higher dimensions, especially to 3D, and to derive the universal form of Green's function for various shapes of the confining domain boundary.Comment: 46 pages, the shortened version submitted to J. Math. Phy

    Eigenvalues of PT-symmetric oscillators with polynomial potentials

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    We study the eigenvalue problem u(z)[(iz)m+Pm1(iz)]u(z)=λu(z)-u^{\prime\prime}(z)-[(iz)^m+P_{m-1}(iz)]u(z)=\lambda u(z) with the boundary conditions that u(z)u(z) decays to zero as zz tends to infinity along the rays argz=π2±2πm+2\arg z=-\frac{\pi}{2}\pm \frac{2\pi}{m+2}, where Pm1(z)=a1zm1+a2zm2+...+am1zP_{m-1}(z)=a_1 z^{m-1}+a_2 z^{m-2}+...+a_{m-1} z is a polynomial and integers m3m\geq 3. We provide an asymptotic expansion of the eigenvalues λn\lambda_n as n+n\to+\infty, and prove that for each {\it real} polynomial Pm1P_{m-1}, the eigenvalues are all real and positive, with only finitely many exceptions.Comment: 23 pages, 1 figure. v2: equation (14) as well as a few subsequent equations has been changed. v3: typos correcte

    Some properties of eigenvalues and eigenfunctions of the cubic oscillator with imaginary coupling constant

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    Comparison between the exact value of the spectral zeta function, ZH(1)=56/5[32cos(π/5)]Γ2(1/5)/Γ(3/5)Z_{H}(1)=5^{-6/5}[3-2\cos(\pi/5)]\Gamma^2(1/5)/\Gamma(3/5), and the results of numeric and WKB calculations supports the conjecture by Bessis that all the eigenvalues of this PT-invariant hamiltonian are real. For one-dimensional Schr\"odinger operators with complex potentials having a monotonic imaginary part, the eigenfunctions (and the imaginary parts of their logarithmic derivatives) have no real zeros.Comment: 6 pages, submitted to J. Phys.

    Generating Converging Bounds to the (Complex) Discrete States of the P2+iX3+iαXP^2 + iX^3 + i\alpha X Hamiltonian

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    The Eigenvalue Moment Method (EMM), Handy (2001), Handy and Wang (2001)) is applied to the HαP2+iX3+iαXH_\alpha \equiv P^2 + iX^3 + i\alpha X Hamiltonian, enabling the algebraic/numerical generation of converging bounds to the complex energies of the L2L^2 states, as argued (through asymptotic methods) by Delabaere and Trinh (J. Phys. A: Math. Gen. {\bf 33} 8771 (2000)).Comment: Submitted to J. Phys.

    Generating Converging Eigenenergy Bounds for the Discrete States of the -ix^3 Non-Hermitian Potential

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    Recent investigations by Bender and Boettcher (Phys. Rev. Lett 80, 5243 (1998)) and Mezincescu (J. Phys. A. 33, 4911 (2000)) have argued that the discrete spectrum of the non-hermitian potential V(x)=ix3V(x) = -ix^3 should be real. We give further evidence for this through a novel formulation which transforms the general one dimensional Schrodinger equation (with complex potential) into a fourth order linear differential equation for Ψ(x)2|\Psi(x)|^2. This permits the application of the Eigenvalue Moment Method, developed by Handy, Bessis, and coworkers (Phys. Rev. Lett. 55, 931 (1985);60, 253 (1988a,b)), yielding rapidly converging lower and upper bounds to the low lying discrete state energies. We adapt this formalism to the pure imaginary cubic potential, generating tight bounds for the first five discrete state energy levels.Comment: Work to appear in J. Phys. A: Math & Ge
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