Inverse square potential
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
The potential energy function of an inverse square potential is
,
where is some constant and is the Euclidean distance from some central point. The corresponding Hamiltonian operator is
.
Properties
The canonical commutation relation of quantum mechanics, , has the property of being invariant in a scaling
, and ,
where is some scaling factor. In an inverse square potential system, if a wavefunction is an eigenfunction of the Hamiltonian operator , it is also an eigenfunction of the operator , where the operators and are defined as above.
This also means that if a radially symmetric wave function is an eigenfunction of with eigenvalue , then also is an eigenfunction, with eigenvalue . Therefore the energy spectrum of the system is a continuum of values.
The system with a particle in an inverse square potential with positive (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 .[2]