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Physical aspects of pseudo-Hermitian and PT-symmetric quantum mechanics

Ali Mostafazadeh, +1 more
- 17 Nov 2004 - 
- Vol. 37, Iss: 48, pp 11645-11679
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TLDR
In this article, a canonical orthonormal basis for non-Hermitian Hamiltonians is introduced, in which a previously introduced unitary mapping of H to a Hermitian H takes a simple form and is used to construct the observables of the quantum mechanics based on H.
Abstract
For a non-Hermitian Hamiltonian H possessing a real spectrum, we introduce a canonical orthonormal basis in which a previously introduced unitary mapping of H to a Hermitian Hamiltonian h takes a simple form. We use this basis to construct the observables Oα of the quantum mechanics based on H. In particular, we introduce pseudo-Hermitian position and momentum operators and a pseudo-Hermitian quantization scheme that relates the latter to the ordinary classical position and momentum observables. These allow us to address the problem of determining the conserved probability density and the underlying classical system for pseudo-Hermitian and in particular PT-symmetric quantum systems. As a concrete example we construct the Hermitian Hamiltonian h, the physical observables Oα, the localized states and the conserved probability density for the non-Hermitian PT-symmetric square well. We achieve this by employing an appropriate perturbation scheme. For this system, we conduct a comprehensive study of both the kinematical and dynamical effects of the non-Hermiticity of the Hamiltonian on various physical quantities. In particular, we show that these effects are quantum mechanical in nature and diminish in the classical limit. Our results provide an objective assessment of the physical aspects of PT-symmetric quantum mechanics and clarify its relationship with both conventional quantum mechanics and classical mechanics.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Making sense of non-Hermitian Hamiltonians

TL;DR: In this article, an alternative formulation of quantum mechanics in which the mathematical axiom of Hermiticity (transpose + complex conjugate) is replaced by the physically transparent condition of space?time reflection ( ) symmetry.
Journal ArticleDOI

Pseudo-Hermitian Representation of Quantum Mechanics

TL;DR: A diagonalizable non-Hermitian Hamiltonian having a real spectrum may be used to define a unitary quantum system, if one modifies the inner product of the Hilbert space properly as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Pseudo-Hermitian Representation of Quantum Mechanics

TL;DR: A diagonalizable non-Hermitian Hamiltonian having a real spectrum can be used to define a unitary quantum system, if one modifies the inner product of the Hilbert space properly as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Spectral Singularities of Complex Scattering Potentials and Infinite Reflection and Transmission Coefficients at Real Energies

TL;DR: This work identifies spectral singularities of complex scattering potentials with the real energies at which the reflection and transmission coefficients tend to infinity, i.e., they correspond to resonances having a zero width and shows that a waveguide modeled using such a potential operates like a resonator at the frequencies of spectral singularity.
Journal ArticleDOI

New topological invariants in non-Hermitian systems.

TL;DR: In this paper, the key concepts pertaining to topological phases in non-Hermitian Hamiltonians with relevant examples and realistic model setups are reviewed, as well as the origins of new topological invariants in the latter setup.
References
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Book

Table of Integrals, Series, and Products

TL;DR: Combinations involving trigonometric and hyperbolic functions and power 5 Indefinite Integrals of Special Functions 6 Definite Integral Integral Functions 7.Associated Legendre Functions 8 Special Functions 9 Hypergeometric Functions 10 Vector Field Theory 11 Algebraic Inequalities 12 Integral Inequality 13 Matrices and related results 14 Determinants 15 Norms 16 Ordinary differential equations 17 Fourier, Laplace, and Mellin Transforms 18 The z-transform
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Matrix Analysis

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present results of both classic and recent matrix analyses using canonical forms as a unifying theme, and demonstrate their importance in a variety of applications, such as linear algebra and matrix theory.
Book

Functional analysis

Walter Rudin
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