TY - JOUR
T1 - Equivalence of a complex PT-symmetric quartic Hamiltonian and a Hermitian quartic Hamiltonian with an anomaly
AU - Bender, Carl M.
AU - Brody, Dorje C.
AU - Chen, Jun Hua
AU - Jones, Hugh F.
AU - Milton, Kimball A.
AU - Ogilvie, Michael C.
PY - 2006
Y1 - 2006
N2 - In a recent paper Jones and Mateo used operator techniques to show that the non-Hermitian PT-symmetric wrong-sign quartic Hamiltonian H=12p2-gx4 has the same spectrum as the conventional Hermitian Hamiltonian H=12p2+4gx4-2gx. Here, this equivalence is demonstrated very simply by means of differential-equation techniques and, more importantly, by means of functional-integration techniques. It is shown that the linear term in the Hermitian Hamiltonian is anomalous; that is, this linear term has no classical analog. The anomaly arises because of the broken parity symmetry of the original non-Hermitian PT-symmetric Hamiltonian. This anomaly in the Hermitian form of a PT-symmetric quartic Hamiltonian is unchanged if a harmonic term is introduced into H. When there is a harmonic term, an immediate physical consequence of the anomaly is the appearance of bound states; if there were no anomaly term, there would be no bound states. Possible extensions of this work to - 4 quantum field theory in higher-dimensional space-time are discussed.
AB - In a recent paper Jones and Mateo used operator techniques to show that the non-Hermitian PT-symmetric wrong-sign quartic Hamiltonian H=12p2-gx4 has the same spectrum as the conventional Hermitian Hamiltonian H=12p2+4gx4-2gx. Here, this equivalence is demonstrated very simply by means of differential-equation techniques and, more importantly, by means of functional-integration techniques. It is shown that the linear term in the Hermitian Hamiltonian is anomalous; that is, this linear term has no classical analog. The anomaly arises because of the broken parity symmetry of the original non-Hermitian PT-symmetric Hamiltonian. This anomaly in the Hermitian form of a PT-symmetric quartic Hamiltonian is unchanged if a harmonic term is introduced into H. When there is a harmonic term, an immediate physical consequence of the anomaly is the appearance of bound states; if there were no anomaly term, there would be no bound states. Possible extensions of this work to - 4 quantum field theory in higher-dimensional space-time are discussed.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/33746310753
U2 - 10.1103/PhysRevD.74.025016
DO - 10.1103/PhysRevD.74.025016
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:33746310753
SN - 1550-7998
VL - 74
JO - Physical Review D - Particles, Fields, Gravitation and Cosmology
JF - Physical Review D - Particles, Fields, Gravitation and Cosmology
IS - 2
M1 - 025016
ER -