4 research outputs found
Spectrum of the non-commutative spherical well
We give precise meaning to piecewise constant potentials in non-commutative
quantum mechanics. In particular we discuss the infinite and finite
non-commutative spherical well in two dimensions. Using this, bound-states and
scattering can be discussed unambiguously. Here we focus on the infinite well
and solve for the eigenvalues and eigenfunctions. We find that time reversal
symmetry is broken by the non-commutativity. We show that in the commutative
and thermodynamic limits the eigenstates and eigenfunctions of the commutative
spherical well are recovered and time reversal symmetry is restored
Bound state energies and phase shifts of a non-commutative well
Non-commutative quantum mechanics can be viewed as a quantum system
represented in the space of Hilbert-Schmidt operators acting on non-commutative
configuration space. Within this framework an unambiguous definition can be
given for the non-commutative well. Using this approach we compute the bound
state energies, phase shifts and scattering cross sections of the non-
commutative well. As expected the results are very close to the commutative
results when the well is large or the non-commutative parameter is small.
However, the convergence is not uniform and phase shifts at certain energies
exhibit a much stronger then expected dependence on the non-commutative
parameter even at small values.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figure
Twist Deformation of Rotationally Invariant Quantum Mechanics
Non-commutative Quantum Mechanics in 3D is investigated in the framework of
the abelian Drinfeld twist which deforms a given Hopf algebra while preserving
its Hopf algebra structure. Composite operators (of coordinates and momenta)
entering the Hamiltonian have to be reinterpreted as primitive elements of a
dynamical Lie algebra which could be either finite (for the harmonic
oscillator) or infinite (in the general case). The deformed brackets of the
deformed angular momenta close the so(3) algebra. On the other hand, undeformed
rotationally invariant operators can become, under deformation, anomalous (the
anomaly vanishes when the deformation parameter goes to zero). The deformed
operators, Taylor-expanded in the deformation parameter, can be selected to
minimize the anomaly. We present the deformations (and their anomalies) of
undeformed rotationally-invariant operators corresponding to the harmonic
oscillator (quadratic potential), the anharmonic oscillator (quartic potential)
and the Coulomb potential.Comment: 20 page