Quantum threshold reflection is not a consequence of the badlands region of the potential
Jakob Petersen, Eli Pollak, Salvador Miret-Artes

TL;DR
Quantum threshold reflection occurs due to fundamental boundary conditions and the entire potential, not the previously assumed badlands region, as shown by theoretical analysis and numerical simulations.
Contribution
The paper demonstrates that the badlands region is irrelevant to quantum threshold reflection, emphasizing the nonlocal nature of the phenomenon through theoretical proof and numerical studies.
Findings
The badlands region does not influence quantum threshold reflection.
Threshold scattering involves the entire potential, not just the badlands region.
Numerical simulations show negligible particle amplitude in the badlands region at threshold.
Abstract
Quantum threshold reflection is a well known quantum phenomenon which prescribes that at threshold, except for special circumstances, a quantum particle scattering from any potential, even if attractive at long range, will be reflected with unit probability. In the past, this property has been associated with the so-called badlands region of the potential, where the semiclassical description of the scattering fails due to a rapid spatial variation of the deBroglie wavelength. This badlands region occurs far from the strong interaction region of the potential and has therefore been used to "explain" the quantum reflection phenomenon. In this paper, we show that the badlands region of the interaction potential is immaterial. The extremely long wavelength of the scattered particle at threshold is much longer than the spatial extension of the badlands region which therefore does not affect…
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