Point-Particle Effective Field Theory I: Classical Renormalization and the Inverse-Square Potential
C.P. Burgess, Peter Hayman, Matt Williams, Laszlo Zalavari

TL;DR
This paper develops an effective field theory approach to singular potentials like the inverse-square potential, clarifying boundary conditions, renormalization effects, and phenomena like reaction catalysis in quantum systems.
Contribution
It introduces a method to derive boundary conditions from source actions, providing a physical criterion and unifying renormalization and boundary condition issues in singular potentials.
Findings
Effective field theory determines boundary conditions via source actions.
Renormalization-group techniques resum non-perturbative interactions.
Universal RG flow can lead to reaction catalysis phenomena.
Abstract
Singular potentials (the inverse-square potential, for example) arise in many situations and their quantum treatment leads to well-known ambiguities in choosing boundary conditions for the wave-function at the position of the potential's singularity. These ambiguities are usually resolved by developing a self-adjoint extension of the original problem; a non-unique procedure that leaves undetermined which extension should apply in specific physical systems. We take the guesswork out of this picture by using techniques of effective field theory to derive the required boundary conditions at the origin in terms of the effective point-particle action describing the physics of the source. In this picture ambiguities in boundary conditions boil down to the allowed choices for the source action, but casting them in terms of an action provides a physical criterion for their determination. The…
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