Fall-to-the-centre as a $\mathcal{PT}$ symmetry breaking transition
Sriram Sundaram, C. P. Burgess, D. H. J. O'Dell

TL;DR
This paper explores the inverse-square potential's critical transition as a $ ext{PT}$ symmetry breaking point, using effective field theory to analyze boundary conditions and RG flow changes in quantum systems with short-range physics.
Contribution
It demonstrates that the critical point of the inverse-square potential corresponds to a $ ext{PT}$ symmetry breaking transition, employing PPEFT to analyze RG flow and boundary conditions.
Findings
RG flow changes from real to imaginary fixed points at critical coupling
Transition from unitary to nonunitary boundary conditions
Limit-cycle evolution in super-critical regime
Abstract
The attractive inverse square potential arises in a number of physical problems such as a dipole interacting with a charged wire, the Efimov effect, the Calgero-Sutherland model, near-horizon black hole physics and the optics of Maxwell fisheye lenses. Proper formulation of the inverse-square problem requires specification of a boundary condition (regulator) at the origin representing short-range physics not included in the inverse square potential and this generically breaks the Hamiltonian's continuous scale invariance in an elementary example of a quantum anomaly. The system's spectrum qualitatively changes at a critical value of the inverse-square coupling, and we here point out that the transition at this critical potential strength can be regarded as an example of a symmetry breaking transition. In particular, we use point particle effective field theory (PPEFT), as…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Mechanics and Non-Hermitian Physics · Quantum chaos and dynamical systems · Quantum, superfluid, helium dynamics
