A non-Hermitian Hamiltonian that has an unbroken PT symmetry can be converted
by means of a similarity transformation to a physically equivalent Hermitian
Hamiltonian. This raises the following question: In which form of the quantum
theory, the non-Hermitian or the Hermitian one, is it easier to perform
calculations? This paper compares both forms of a non-Hermitian ix3
quantum-mechanical Hamiltonian and demonstrates that it is much harder to
perform calculations in the Hermitian theory because the perturbation series
for the Hermitian Hamiltonian is constructed from divergent Feynman graphs. For
the Hermitian version of the theory, dimensional continuation is used to
regulate the divergent graphs that contribute to the ground-state energy and
the one-point Green's function. The results that are obtained are identical to
those found much more simply and without divergences in the non-Hermitian
PT-symmetric Hamiltonian. The O(g4) contribution to the
ground-state energy of the Hermitian version of the theory involves graphs with
overlapping divergences, and these graphs are extremely difficult to regulate.
In contrast, the graphs for the non-Hermitian version of the theory are finite
to all orders and they are very easy to evaluate.Comment: 13 pages, REVTeX, 10 eps figure