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ORIGINAL RESEARCH article

Front. Phys., 24 April 2014
Sec. Statistical and Computational Physics

Distributional approach to point interactions in one-dimensional quantum mechanics

  • 1Grupo de Física Teórica e Modelagem Matemática, Departamento de Matemática e Estatística, Universidade Estadual de Ponta Grossa, Ponta Grossa, PR, Brazil
  • 2Department of Physics, Concordia College, Moorhead, MN, USA

We consider the one-dimensional quantum mechanical problem of defining interactions concentrated at a single point in the framework of the theory of distributions. The often ill-defined product which describes the interaction term in the Schrödinger and Dirac equations is replaced by a well-defined distribution satisfying some simple mathematical conditions and, in addition, the physical requirement of probability current conservation is imposed. A four-parameter family of interactions thus emerges as the most general point interaction both in the non-relativistic and in the relativistic theories (in agreement with results obtained by self-adjoint extensions). Since the interaction is given explicitly, the distributional method allows one to carry out symmetry investigations in a simple way, and it proves to be useful to clarify some ambiguities related to the so-called δ′ interaction.

1. Introduction

Point (zero-range) interactions have attracted great interest in quantum mechanics [17]. They provide important solvable models with a wide variety of applications in atomic physics, such as the Lieb-Liniger [8, 9] model for a one dimensional gas of bosons interacting by means of a δ-function potential (for other applications see e.g., [1012] and references therein). In addition, point interactions have proven to be a fruitful theoretical laboratory to investigate methods of quantum field theory (QFT), such as regularization and renormalization, in simpler and more manageable models in one and two-dimensional quantum mechanics [1315].

The simplest point interaction in one dimensional non-relativistic quantum mechanics is given by the Dirac's δ-function potential, which is well defined and has well-known solutions. However, attempts to consider more general interactions, such as that associated with a δ′ potential (the prime indicates a spatial derivative), have been known to be plagued with difficulties associated with the definition of the interaction [6, 1621] (also see [22] and references therein).

Mathematically rigorous methods were employed to define such interactions by obtaining self-adjoint extensions (SAE) of the kinetic energy operator for Schrödinger's theory. It was shown that a four-parameter family of interactions, defined by their boundary conditions, exhaust all the possibilities for point interactions in non-relativistic quantum mechanics [6, 23, 24] (for a review of the mathematical literature on this subject see [1]).

Given the somewhat abstract and mathematically involved nature of SAE, another approach was developed for this subject, consisting in the investigation of regularizations using sequences of regular short-range potentials which converge to point potentials in the zero-range limit [16, 20, 21, 25]. Even if this method is more intuitive and appealing from a physicist's point of view, such an approach has often led to ambiguous and even contradictory results—which, in general, arise from the dependence of the particular regularizing scheme employed (see, for instance, [5, 7, 26] and references there cited).

In relativistic quantum mechanics, for a Dirac particle, even the δ-function potential (which is the most singular interaction allowed in the Dirac's equation) is problematic and it is known to lead to ambiguities [2730]. Similarly to the non-relativistic case, the SAE approach implies that the most general point interactions in Dirac's theory are also given by a four-parameter family of interactions [31, 32]. The most commonly studied particular cases of relativistic point interactions correspond to pure electrostatic and pure scalar potentials, which have also been investigated by regularization through δ-converging sequences of functions, with results that are, in general, dependent on the regularizing function used [5, 27, 28].

The situation described above is not entirely new: analogous difficulties involving regularization ambiguities arise in QFT and have been successfully addressed by using the Epstein-Glaser approach to QFT, in which distribution theory is employed from the beginning and the symmetries of the system are carefully implemented (see e.g., [3336] and references therein). In a similar vein, in this paper we will introduce a distributional approach to point interactions in quantum mechanics – first announced in a preliminary version in [37].

The method proposed here starts from the realization that both the singular potential and the wave function in the Schrödinger or Dirac equations must be considered as distributions. This precludes the naive definition of the interaction term in these equations as the usual product between the wave function and the potential energy, since such a product is generally ill-defined in distribution theory [38, 39]. We will introduce a well defined distribution to play the role of the interaction term, the properties of which must follow from simple mathematical requirements concerning its support and singular order (a concept introduced in the next section), besides the physical requirement of conservation of the probability current across the singular point. As a consequence, a four-parameter family of distributions will naturally emerge as the most general point interaction in both non-relativistic and relativistic one-dimensional quantum mechanics, a result which is in complete agreement with those obtained with the SAE approach [32, 40]. However, there is an important conceptual difference between the SAE and the distributional approaches, for while the first characterizes all the possible point interactions only through the boundary conditions that the wave function must satisfy around the singular point, the latter explicitly gives the interaction term as a distribution concentrated at that point—thus, in the distributional approach the boundary conditions emerge as a consequence of the properties of the particular interaction distribution substituted into the Schrödinger or Dirac equations. Thus, the distributional approach provides an alternative (also mathematically rigorous) to the method of SAE, with the advantage of being less abstract (to a physicist) and allowing a more intuitive physical interpretation of the interaction term, which here is presented explicitly as a distribution. In addition, the distributional approach can contribute to clarify some ambiguities which arise from the use of regularizations to treat zero-range potentials – in particular, the explicit form of the interaction distribution allow us to address, in a straightforward way, the much debated question about the existence or not of a “true” (i.e., odd under parity) point interaction associated with a δ′ potential. Notice that a proper definition of the notion of an odd point interaction is a non-trivial task in the context of the SAE approach.

It is worth to notice that in this work we are concerned only to the well-established Schwartz's theory of distributions, which considers only distributions defined on spaces of infinitely differentiable test functions. An approach based on an alternative theory of distributions defined on spaces of discontinuous test functions was also proposed by Kurasov [41], who assumes the wave function to be a member of a space of test functions and claims that point interactions cannot be properly defined in the framework of the standard distribution theory. In the approach proposed here such a difficulty does not arise because the wave function itself must be consistently treated as a distribution, not as a test function. This is analogous to what occurs in the Epstein-Glaser distributional approach to QFT, in which quantities defined in terms of quantum fields must be treated themselves as (operator-valued) distributions [33, 34].

This paper is organized as follows. In section 2 we introduce the distributional approach by considering the Schrödinger equation with a singular potential of order rs = 1, the most singular point interaction allowed in non-relativistic one-dimensional quantum mechanics. In Section 3 we extend our methods to consider Dirac's equation with a singular interaction of order rs = 0. Section 4 is reserved for our concluding remarks.

2. Schrödinger's Equation with Point Interactions

In this Section we introduce the distributional approach to point interactions in one dimensional quantum mechanics. We consider distributions defined on the Schwartz space of rapid descent test functions—for a comprehensive treatment of distributions see [38], which we follow closely (also see [39]).

For a non-relativistic particle moving under the influence of a potential energy V(x) which is assumed to be a locally integrable function (i.e., a function integrable in the Lebesgue sense over every finite interval), the one-dimensional time-independent Schrödinger equation can be written as (in this section we will adopt units such that ħ = 1 and 2m = 1)

d2dx2ψ(x)+Eψ(x)=V(x)ψ(x).    (1)

Then, by assuming that the wave function ψ is continuous everywhere, the interaction term, V(x)ψ(x), is well-defined and corresponds to a locally integrable ordinary function. On the other hand, potentials which do not correspond to locally integrable functions are called singular, as it is the case of the Dirac δ-“function” or its derivatives, and only make sense as distributions. Distributions corresponding to locally integrable functions are said to be regular. As a consequence, in the case of singular potentials the Schrödinger equation is in general mathematically ill-defined, since the wave function itself must be considered as a distribution and the product appearing on the r. h. s. of Equation (1) is not a well defined operation for two arbitrary distributions [38, 39].

The starting point of a distributional approach to singular interactions is to rewrite Schrödinger's equation as

ψ(x)+k2ψ(x)=s[ψ](x),    (2)

where k  E, the prime indicates a distributional derivative with respect to x, and the interaction term was substituted by a distribution s[ψ](x), still to be determined by mathematical and physical requirements, and which univocally determines the interaction. Then, in any interval which does not include the singularities the potential is regular (and the wave function ψ continuous), and therefore the interaction distribution, s[ψ](x), coincides with the ordinary product of functions ψ(x)V(x) in such an interval.

In order to determine the interaction distribution s[ψ](x) let us define the singular order (or simply the order) of a distribution, a concept that characterizes the “strength” of the singularity and plays a crucial role in this approach. The definition of singular order of a distribution adopted in this work is the extended concept of order considered by Zemanian (see [38], p. 162–163), which can be written as follows. A distribution f is said to have singular order r ∈ ℤ on a closed finite interval I if f = v(r+2) in this interval, where v is a distribution corresponding to a continuous but not differentiable function on I and v(r+2) is the (r + 2)-th distributional derivative of v (a “derivative of negative order" means an indefinite integration, as usual). An infinitely smooth function is said to have order r = − ∞. If a distribution has a finite order the operations of differentiation and indefinite integration change its order by +1 and −1, respectively. It follows that distributions having r≤ −2 are regular, whereas distributions having r ≥ 0 are singular. When r = −1 the distribution can be regular or singular, depending on the case. As some important examples, the Heaviside θ distribution has singular order −1 (and it is a regular distribution), while its primitives have r = −2, and correspond to continuous but not differentiable functions. The Dirac's delta δ (= θ′) and its first derivative δ′ are singular distributions with singular orders 0 and +1, respectively.

Let us now return to the task of determining the interaction distribution s[ψ](x). We require that:

(i) supp s ⊆ supp V;

(ii) the singular order of the distribution s[ψ](x) cannot exceed the singular order of V(x) in any closed subset of its support,

where supp s indicates the support of the distribution s, which is the smallest closed set outside of which s equals zero [38]. Both these requirements are automatically satisfied when V(x) corresponds to a regular distribution—here we are just extending them in a natural way to the case of potentials described by singular distributions. In particular, requirement (ii) prevents the introduction of interaction terms even more singular than the original potential (this is analogous to the minimal distribution splitting condition introduced in the Epstein-Glaser approach to QFT [33, 34]).

In this paper we are interested only in singular point interactions, i.e., interactions which vanish everywhere except at a single point, which is assumed to be the origin x = 0, where they are singular. Thus, from the requirement (i) above, it follows that supp s[ψ] = {0}.

We now recall a fundamental theorem from distribution theory (see [38], Theorem 3.5-2, p. 98):

Theorem 1. A necessary and sufficient condition for a distribution f(x) on ℝ to have a support concentrated at the origin is that it be a finite sum

f(x)=m=0rsαmδ(m)(x),    (3)

where the αm are (complex) constants, αrs ≠ 0, δ(m) is the m-th derivative of the δ distribution, and rs is the singular order of distribution f.

From this theorem we conclude that the interaction distribution s[ψ](x) must be a linear combination of the delta distribution and its derivatives at the origin, which implies

s[ψ](x)=m=0rsαm[ψ]δ(m)(x),    (4)

where rs stands for the singular order of the interaction term, δ(m) denotes the m-th derivative of the δ-distribution and αm[ψ] are complex numbers, expressed as linear functionals depending on the behavior of the wave function around the singular point, i.e., αm[ψ] ≡ αm[ψ(0±), ψ′(0±)]. This last condition is needed if only local interactions are to be considered, and the linearity of αm[ψ] is required by the superposition principle.

The specification of the singular order rs and of all the coefficients αm (m = 0, …, rs) in Equation (4) uniquely determines the interaction. However, in order to determine such quantities we must impose on the system some fundamental physical requirements and, since we are considering a stationary system, it is natural to require that

(iii) the probability current must be conserved everywhere – in particular, it must be conserved across the singular point;

there is, of course, nothing new about this requirement in itself – however, when considered together with (i) and (ii) it drastically reduces the number of free parameters in a point interaction, as shown below.

From now on, let us restrict ourselves to point interactions of singular order rs = 1 and look for the most general s[ψ](x) allowed by the requirements (i)-(iii). We observe that rs = 1 is the maximum singular order allowed in order to have normalizable wave functions (i.e., square integrable ordinary functions)—if rs > 1 were allowed the stationary wave function would have singular order greater than or equal to zero, and it would necessarily be a singular distribution.

An example of a potential with singular order rs = 1 is given by the so-called delta prime potential energy, namely V(x) = γδ′(x) with the strength of the interaction γ being a real constant. This potential, when naively substituted in Schrödinger's Equation (1), is well-known to lead to contradictions—see, e.g., [6, 19, 22]. The reason for such contradictions is that the product ψ (x)δ′(x) can be defined in distribution theory if, and only if, both the wave function and its first derivative are continuous at the origin (in which case it is ψ(x)δ′(x) = −ψ′(0)δ(x) + ψ(0)δ′(x), see [38]) – but such requirement is not compatible with Schrödinger's Equation (1), as a simple analysis of the singular order shows: both sides of this equation must have the same singular order at the origin, and the r.h.s. −ψ′(0)δ(x) + ψ(0)δ′(x) has singular order +1; hence ψ″(x), ψ′(x) and ψ (x) must have singular orders +1, 0, and −1, respectively, which means that the wave function must be discontinuous at the origin.

Let us return to our task of determining the s[ψ](x) which corresponds to a point interaction with singular order rs = +1. According to conditions (i), (ii) and Theorem 1, one must consider (2) for the most general interaction distribution with singular order +1 and concentrated at the origin:

s[ψ](x)=α0[ψ]δ(x)+α1[ψ]δ(x),    (5)

with α1 [ψ] ≠ 0. The coefficients α0 [ψ] and α1[ψ] have yet to be determined (the δ-function potential, which has singularity rδ = 0, can be obtained as a particular case of the above interaction by requiring α0[ψ] ≠ 0 and α1 [ψ] = 0).

We recall that taking the indefinite integral of a distribution decreases its singular order by one. Thus, since ψ must have singular order −1, any primitive ψ(−1) must have singular order −2, and corresponds to a function continuous (but not differentiable) at the origin. Therefore, by taking the indefinite integral in both sides of Equation (2), with the interaction distribution given by Equation (5), we have

ψ(x)+k2ψ(1)(x)=α0[ψ]θ(x)+α1[ψ]δ(x)+c1,    (6)

where c1 is an arbitrary (complex) constant. In any interval which does not include the origin both sides of the above equation equal an ordinary function (in particular, the distribution δ vanishes identically in such an interval). Taking into account the continuity of ψ(−1) at the origin, from the above expression we have

ψ(0+)ψ(0)=α0[ψ].    (7)

Similarly, taking the indefinite integral of Equation (6), and using the continuity of any primitive θ(−1) of the distribution θ (since such a primitive has singular order −2), we conclude that

ψ(0+)ψ(0)=α1[ψ].    (8)

Equations (7, 8) reflect the fact that the boundary conditions (b.c.) at the origin are completely determined from the knowledge of the interaction, i.e., from the functional coefficients α0 and α1.

The above b.c. can be written in terms of the wave function and its derivative by noticing that the most general way to express the linear functionals α0 and α1 is

Ω(α1α0)=M+Φ(0+)MΦ(0),withΦ(x)(ψ(x)ψ(x))    (9)

where M± are 2 × 2 complex matrices yet to be determined.

Equation (9) is a direct consequence of requirements (i) and (ii) and the solution of the distributional Schrödinger equation with the general interaction (5). This alone, however, does not impose any constraints on the form of M± (i.e., on the functionals α0 and α1); such constraints will come from imposing, in addition to (i) and (ii), condition (iii).

Conservation of the probability current across the origin simply means j(0) = j(0+) and, since in any interval which does not include the origin the distribution describing the probability current coincides with the ordinary product of functions j(x) = −i[ψ*(x) ψ′(x) − ψ*′(x) ψ(x)], both sides of that equation are well defined and finite for a general point interaction.

In order to impose (iii) it is convenient first to use the identity |z+iw|2|z+iw|2=2i(zw*z*w), which is valid for any pair of complex numbers z and w, and rewrite the current density as [42]

L0j(x)=12[|L0ψ(x)+iψ(x)|2|L0ψ(x)+iψ(x)|2],    (10)

where L0 is an arbitrary non-zero constant inserted for dimensional reasons. Introducing the vectors

V1[ψ](L0ψ(0+)+iψ(0+)L0ψ(0)+iψ(0));V2[ψ](L0ψ(0+)+iψ(0+)L0ψ(0)+iψ(0))    (11)

the condition of probability current conservation, j(0+) = j(0), can be rewritten as the requirement that the vectors V1 [ψ] and V2 [ψ] have the same length: V2 [ψ] V2[ψ] = V1 [ψ]V1 [ψ]. Thus, there must exist an unitary matrix U such that [42]

V2[ψ]=UV1[ψ].    (12)

The boundary conditions (7–9) can be written in matrix form in terms of the vectors V1 [ψ] and V2 [ψ] as

Ω=A1V1[ψ]A2V2[ψ],    (13)

with

A1=12(i     iL01L01),A2=12(i       iL01L01),    (14)

and after using the condition of probability current conservation, Equation (12), the above expression for Ω becomes

Ω=[A1A2U]V1[ψ]   =12(i[1+eiθ(z+w*)]      i[1+eiθ(z*w)]L01[1eiθ(zw*)]  L01[1eiθ(z*+w)])V1[ψ],    (15)

where we used the following parametrization for the unitary matrix U:

U=eiθ(   z      ww* z*),θ[0,π),|z|2+|w|2=1.    (16)

After rewriting V1 [ψ] in (15) in terms of Φ(0±) we obtain Ω in the form (9), with M± given by

M+=12(1+eiθ(z+w*)              iL0[1+eiθ(z+w*)]iL01[1eiθ(zw*)]  1eiθ(zw*))M=12(1eiθ(z*w)          iL0[1+eiθ(z*w)]iL01[1eiθ(z*+w)]  eiθ(z+w)1)    (17)

then, the b.c. (13) can be rewritten as

R+Φ(0+)=RΦ(0),    (18)

where we defined R± = 1 − M±. It is easy to show that det R+ = −w*eiθ and that det R = weiθ. Thus, R+ and R are both invertible if, and only if, w ≠ 0, in which case we can write

Φ(0+)=ΛΦ(0),    (19)

where

Λ=R+1R=iw*(sinθ(z)  L0(cosθ+(z))cosθ+(z)L0    sinθ+(z)),    (20)

with ℜ(z) and ℑ(z) indicating the real and imaginary parts of z, respectively. From (20), it follows that |detΛ|=|ww*|=1 and Λ can be rewritten in the form

Λ=eiφ(a bc d),adbc=1,φ[0,π)and                          a,b,c,d.    (21)

The four parameter family of point interactions given by Equation (21) represents the most general point interactions consistent with a rigorous distributional approach to Schrödinger equation, under the requirements (i)-(iii) and the condition det R± ≠ 0 [see (18)]. This result is in agreement with the results obtained by the method of SAE, and corresponds to the case of a four parameter family of non-separated solutions [40].

From Equations (13, 19) in the case w ≠ 0 one can rewrite the functionals α1 and α0 in terms of Φ(0) as

Ω=Φ(0+)Φ(0)=(Λ1)Φ(0),    (22)

from which one can obtain the explicit form of the interaction distribution as

s[ψ](x)=[ceiφψ(0)+(deiφ1)ψ(0)]δ(x)             +[(aeiφ1)ψ(0)+beiφψ(0)]δ(x).    (23)

Alternatively, one can invert (19) and substitute into (22) to obtain

s[ψ](x)=[ceiφψ(0+)(aeiφ1)ψ(0+)]δ(x)             [(deiφ1)ψ(0+)beiφψ(0+)]δ(x).     (24)

In order to complete the analysis of Schrödinger's equation with point interactions, we still have to consider the case in which w = 0 (which reduces the number of free parameters to 2). In this case both det R± = 0 and, from Equation (12), we obtain

     (zeiθ1)ψ(0+)iL0(zeiθ+1)ψ(0+)=0,    (25)
(z*eiθ1)ψ(0)+iL0(z*eiθ+1)ψ(0)=0.    (26)

The solution of these equations is as follows. If zeiθ + 1 = 0 (z*eiθ + 1 = 0) we obtain ψ(0+) = 0 with ψ′(0+) an arbitrary finite number [ψ(0) = 0 and ψ′(0) arbitrary, respectively]. On the other hand, if zeiθ +1≠ 0 it follows that ψ′(0+) = h+ ψ (0+), with h+=zeiθ1iL0(zeiθ+1)=2(zeiθ)L0|1+zeiθ|2 a real number [analogously, if z*eiθ + 1 ≠ 0, we have ψ′(0) = h ψ (0) with h=1z*eiθiL0(z*eiθ+1)=2(z*eiθ)L0|1+z*eiθ|2 real]. Therefore, one can summarize the case w = 0 as

ψ(0±)=h±ψ(0±),h±{},    (27)

which, for instance, implies that j(0+) = j(0) = 0. Again, this result is in agreement with the results obtained from the SAE approach, and corresponds to a two-parameter family of separated solutions [40]. In this case the explicit form of the interaction distribution is

s[ψ](x)=[h+ψ(0+)hψ(0)]δ(x)                +[ψ(0+)ψ(0)]δ(x)           =[ψ(0+)ψ(0)]δ(x)                +[h+1ψ(0+)h1ψ(0)]δ(x).    (28)

The ability to provide explicit forms for the interaction, such as (23), (24), and (28), in terms of well defined distributions (consistent with the equation of motion), is the main difference between the results obtained from the distributional and the SAE approaches. While both methods coincide in the characterization of all point interactions by a four parameter family, only the distributional approach provides such an explicit visualization of the interaction as a distribution concentrated at the origin, a feature which allows one to investigate the properties of the interaction under symmetry transformations in a straightforward way. This will be used in the next section to properly define the notion of a point interaction that is odd under parity – a non-trivial task in the context of SAE (see, for instance, [40] for a broad investigation of the symmetries of the Schrödinger operators with point interactions).

2.1. Symmetry Under Parity Transformations

Let us investigate the behavior of the Schrödinger Equation (2) under parity transformations, in order to select subfamilies of interactions according to their symmetry properties. From (5) and (15) the interaction distribution can be put in the form

s[ψ](x)=(δ(x), δ(x))Ω            =(δ(x), δ(x))[A1A2U]V1[ψ],    (29)

with the matrices Ai's given by (14). Defining ϕ(− x) ≡ ψ(x) and noticing that ψ(0±) = ϕ(0) and ψ′(0±) = −ϕ′(0), the Schrödinger Equation (2) can be rewritten in terms of ϕ as

ϕ(x)+k2ϕ(x)=(δ(x),δ(x)) [A1A2U] σ1V1 [ϕ],    (30)

where σi (i = 1, 2, 3) indicates a Pauli matrix and V1[ϕ] is obtained from (11) by making the substitution ψ → ϕ. Performing a space reflection, x → − x, and taking into account that δ′(− x) = −δ′(x) and δ(− x) = δ(x) the above equation becomes

ϕ(x)+k2ϕ(x)=(δ(x), δ(x)) [σ3(A1A2U)σ1]V1[ϕ]                         s˜[ϕ](x).    (31)

Since −σ3 Ajσ1 = Aj, (j = 1, 2), and

U˜=σ1Uσ1=eiθ(z*w*w      z),    (32)

we have that

σ3(A1A2U)σ1=A1A2U˜.    (33)

Therefore, ϕ solves a Schrödinger equation with an interaction term s˜[ϕ](x) which conserves probability across the origin and it is completely determined by the unitary matrix Ũ.

For a regular potential, the interaction is said to be even under parity if ϕ(x) = ψ(− x) is a solution of the same Schrödinger equation solved by ψ(x). Extending this concept to point interactions, we say that an interaction is even if s˜[ϕ](x) = s[ϕ](x), which is equivalent to the condition Ũ = U. From (32) we see that this condition is satisfied if, and only if, z = z* and w = −w*. Thus, for w ≠ 0 Equations (20, 21) imply that the interaction is even if a = d and φ = 0, whereas for w = 0 we must have h+ = −h < ∞ or h+ = h = ∞.

As an example of an even interaction we mention the well-known δ-interaction, given by φ = 0, a = d = 1, b = 0 and c an arbitrary real number. Another example of an even interaction is given by the choice φ = 0, a = d = 1, c = 0 and b an arbitrary real number, which corresponds to the interaction term s[ψ](x) = bψ′(0) = bψ′(0+) ≡ bψ′(0), the so-called δ′-interaction – which, as it is well-known, does not have the “correct” (odd) symmetry under parity, as one would expect from an interaction associated to the “potential” δ′ (see, for instance, [6, 20, 21]).

Given the “unexpected” behavior of the δ′-interaction under parity transformations, let us investigate whether the four parameter family of general point interactions includes or not any interaction which behaves under parity in the same way that we would expect of an interaction associated with an odd potential. To this end, we recall that for a regular odd potential V(x) [i.e., V( − x) = − V(x)] it follows that ϕ(x) = ψ( − x) satisfies a Schrödinger equation for an interaction term with the opposite sign with respect to the interaction term in the equation satisfied by ψ (x). This is generalized to point interactions by saying that an interaction is odd under parity if it satisfies the condition s˜[ϕ](x) = −s[ϕ](x). From (29), (31), and (33) this condition is satisfied if, and only if,

A1A2U˜=[A1A2U].    (34)

Condition (34) implies that ℜ(z) = 0, θ=π2 and ℑ(w) = −1; these, together with the unitary condition (16), give ℑ(z) = ℜ(w) = 0. Notice that this case (w = −i ≠ 0) is characterized by a matrix Λ which, according to (20), is the identity matrix. This corresponds to an interaction term which is identically zero and proves that there is no point interaction in non-relativistic one-dimensional quantum mechanics that behaves properly as an odd interaction. Therefore, point interactions are either even or have no defined parity under space reflections.

A similar result about the nonexistence of a “genuine” δ′-interaction was obtained in [20] through a particular regularization procedure. We stress that our result is mathematically rigorous and independent of regularization, thus helping to clarify and to put into perspective any result obtained from a regularization procedure. In fact, suppose that a regularized product ψ(x)Vϵ(x) is used as the interaction term into the Schrödinger equation, where Vϵ is a sequence of regular distributions converging to a point potential V(x) in the zero-range limit ϵ → 0 (here ϵ may indicate multiple indices). If in this limit the regular products ψ(x)Vϵ(x) converge in the sense of distributions, our approach implies that the limiting distribution must be a member (or a subfamily) of the four-parameter family of point interactions described above, which does not contain any genuinely odd interaction. Thus, we conclude that there is no regularization procedure which is able to produce an odd point interaction: even if all the regular products ψ(x)Vϵ(x) of the sequence are odd under parity, in the zero-range limit the interaction term will lose this property. As an illustration of this fact, we recall that in [16] Šeba demonstrated that if one considers the δ′(x) potential as the zero-range limit of the particular sequence of (singular) distributions Vϵ(x) = [δ(x + ϵ) − δ(x − ϵ)]/2ϵ (for which the product ψ(x)Vϵ(x) is well defined for all ϵ > 0), the interaction term obtained in the zero range limit corresponds to an impenetrable barrier, with reflection and transmission coefficients R = −1 and T = 0 (see also [6])1. Notice that for ϵ > 0 each regularized product ψ(x)Vϵ(x) behaves as an odd interaction, but in the limit ϵ → 0 these products converge to an interaction of the form (28) with h+ = h = ∞, which corresponds to an impenetrable δ-interaction – an even interaction under parity transformations.

3. Dirac's Equation With Point Interactions

In this section we generalize the approach introduced in the previous section to find the most general family of point interactions allowed in one-dimensional relativistic quantum mechanics, in the context of Dirac's equation. Let us first recall that, in one dimension, the time-independent Dirac equation for a particle of mass m interacting with a regular potential V(x) is (throughout this section we adopt natural units, ħ = c = 1)

(iαxddxβm+E)ψ(x)=ψ(x)V(x),    (35)

where αx and β are the Dirac matrices satisfying {αx, β} = 0 and which can be chosen as β = σ3 and αx = σ1, with σi indicating the Pauli's matrices. The Dirac spinor ψ(x) can be written in terms of its two components as ψ(x) = (u(x), v(x))T, where T stands for the transpose.

As it is well known, in the relativistic case even for the simplest point interaction (i.e., the Dirac delta potential) the interaction term cannot be naively defined as the product ψ(x)V(x): defining the interaction as ψ(0)δ(x) is inconsistent with the fact that Dirac's equation implies that ψ(x) must be discontinuous at the origin, as can be seen by equating the singular order in both sides of the resulting equation. Thus, in the same spirit of the previous section, we rewrite Dirac's Equation (35) with the interaction term substituted by a well-defined interaction distribution,

(iαxddxβm+E)ψ(x)=S[ψ](x),    (36)

where S[ψ](x) is a two-component spinor whose components are well defined distributions. Similarly, we demand that requirement (i) and (ii) of the previous section be satisfied. Together with Theorem 1 these imply that

S[ψ](x)=n=0rsΩn[ψ]δ(n)(x),    (37)

where rs is the singular order of the interaction term and Ωn[ψ] = (φ0n[ψ], φ1n[ψ])T are spinors whose (yet to be determined) components are linear functionals of the boundary values ψ(0±), which completely characterize the interaction. However, the most singular point interaction allowed in the one dimensional Dirac's equation (which still gives the possibility to build normalizable wave functions as superpositions of the stationary solutions) is described by a distribution with singular order zero, corresponding to a δ interaction. Thus, from now on we restrict ourselves to consider Equation (37) with rs = 0, which is then reduced to

S[ψ](x)=Ω0[ψ]δ(x);Ω0[ψ]=(φ0φ1),    (38)

where we dropped the subscript “0” in the components φ0(1), to simplify the notation.

Substituting the interaction (38) into Dirac's equation results in b.c. for the Dirac spinor given by

ψ(0+)ψ(0)=iαxΩ0[ψ],    (39)

as can be seen by taking an indefinite integral of the Dirac equation and using the fact that the primitive ψ(−1) is continuous (since rs = 0, this primitive has singular order −2).

The equation resulting from the substitution of (38) into (36) can be rewritten as two coupled first order equations for u(x) and v(x), which in turn can be reduced to

v(x)=1(E+m)[φ1δ(x)iu(x)],    (40)

and a second order equation for u(x):

u(x)+kr2u(x)=(E+m)φ0δ(x)iφ1δ(x),    (41)

with krE2m2. Equation (41) is a Schrödinger-like equation for u(x) with a singular interaction of order +1.

The solution of (40, 41) follows directly from the results in section 2. However, before proceeding to obtain the explicit form of the interaction term, let us first consider the requirement (iii) of probability current conservation. In one dimension the relativistic current density is given by j1 (x) = ψ(xxψ(x) = u*(x)v(x) + u(x)v*(x); from Equation (40) it follows that v(0±)=i(E+m)u(0±) and therefore

j1(0±)=1i(E+m){u*(0±)u(0±)u*(0±) u(0±)}.    (42)

Hence, conservation of the “non-relativistic” probability current associated with u(x) implies the conservation of the relativistic current across the singular point.

The formal similarity between (41) and the Schrödinger equation with the interaction term (5) allows us to find the b.c. for u and u′ at the origin by identifying (E + m0 = α0 and iφ1 = α1, so that all the results from the previous section are also valid for the u-component of the Dirac spinor. Then, by taking into account (40) we obtain the b.c. for v and for the Dirac spinor ψ. In fact, it follows from (18) that the vector ϒ (x) ≡ (u(x), u′(x))T satisfies the b.c. R+ϒ(0+) = Rϒ(0), with R± given in section 2. Noticing that ϒ(0±) = Gψ(0±), with the G matrix defined as

G=(1        00 i(E+m)),

from the results for the non-relativistic theory it follows directly that:

(a) If det R± ≠ 0 the relativistic b.c. can be written as

ψ(0+)=Λrψ(0),    (43)

where Λr = G−1ΛG can be written as (the subscript “r” is to indicate relativistic quantities)

Λr=eiφr( ar   ibricr dr),ardrbrcr=1,    (44)

with φr ∈ [0, π) and ar, br, cr, dr ∈ ℝ are (dimensionless) constants.

(b) If det R± = 0, the relativistic b.c. can be written as

v(0±)=ihr±u(0±),hr±{}.    (45)

Therefore, we conclude that, similarly to the non-relativistic case, there are two possible situations in one-dimensional relativistic quantum mechanics: for non-separated solutions [case (a) above] there is a four-parameter family of interactions that includes all the possible point interactions, and for separated solutions [case (b) above; corresponding to set w = 0 in (16)] the number of free parameters is reduced to two. Again, this result agrees with that obtained by SAE [32] – for works dealing with particular one-parameter subfamilies of these interactions see [2730].

The explicit form of the relativistic interaction term for the case (a) above can be found from (38), (39), and (43) as

S[ψ](x)=iαx(Λr1)ψ(0) δ(x),    (46)

whereas for the case (b) we use (38), (39), and (45) to obtain

S[ψ](x)=iαx[(1     0ihr+0)ψ(0+)(1     0ihr0) ψ(0)] δ(x).    (47)

It is convenient to express (41) explicitly in terms of the parameters in (44) or (45). For case (a), with the interaction term given by (46), the u-component of the Dirac spinor satisfies [also see Equation (38)]

u(x)+kru(x)=[(E+m)creiφru(0)+(dreiφr1)u(0)] δ(x)                        +[(areiφr1)u(0)+brE+meiφru(0)] δ(x).    (48)

Similarly, when the interaction term is given by (47) [case (b)] the equation for the u-component reads

u(x)+kr2u(x)=(E+m)[hr+u(0+)+hru(0)] δ(x)                            +[u(0+)u(0)] δ(x).    (49)

Equations (48, 49) are suitable to analyze the non-relativistic limit (characterized, as usual, by Em, krk) of Dirac's equation. Following a procedure analogous to the one presented in [43], it can be shown that in the non-relativistic limit v(x) is the “small” component of the Dirac spinor, whereas the above Schrödinger-like equations satisfied by the “large” component u(x) correspond, in that limit, to Equations (23, 27), respectively. Comparing the above equations with their equivalent in the non-relativistic case [see Equations (23, 28), respectively], we can establish a one-to-one correspondence between the parameters of the relativistic and non-relativistic families of point interactions:

φ=φr,a=ar,b=br2m,c=2mcr,d=dr,    (50)
h±=2mhr±,    (51)

which was also reported in the context of SAE [32]. For instance, from these relations it is straightforward to see that the relativistic interaction that corresponds in the non-relativistic limit to a δ-interaction with strength γ is given by φr = br = 0, ar = dr = 1, cr = γ, which corresponds to the following interaction term in the Dirac equation

S[ψ](x)=12γ(1+β)ψ(0)δ(x),    (52)

where 1 is the 2× 2 identity matrix. This interaction is an equal mix of electrostatic and scalar potentials, which is known to be a confining interaction [29] (i.e., the transmission amplitude approaches zero in the limit γ → ∞). On the other hand, the relativistic interaction given by φr = 0, ar = dr = 1, br = −γ and cr = 0,

S[ψ](x)=12γ(1β)ψ(0)δ(x),    (53)

is the inverted mix of electrostatic and scalar potentials (also confining [29]) and corresponds, in the non-relativistic limit, to the interaction given by φ = c = 0, a = d = 1 and b=γ2m, which is the so-called δ′-interaction (with strength −γ/4m2). Other well-known one-parameter subfamilies of relativistic interactions are the pure scalar (φr = 0, br = cr = γ, ar = dr = 1) and pure electrostatic (φr = 0, −br = cr = γ, ar = dr = 1), which do not correspond in the non-relativistic limit either to a δ or to the δ′ interaction, as already observed by Benvegnù and Dąbrowski [32]. These are, of course, just some examples of particular one-parameter subfamilies often studied in the framework of relativistic quantum mechanics in one dimension; all of them are included in the four-parameter family of interactions considered above.

Finally, the results of subsection 2.1, concerning the characterization of non-relativistic point interactions with respect to their behavior under space reversal (parity transformations), can be straightforwardly extended to relativistic interactions. Accordingly, if ψ(x) solves a Dirac equation with the interaction S[ψ](x), the interaction is said to be even under space reversal if ψ˜(x)≡ βψ( − x) solves the same equation, and it is said to be odd if ψ˜(x) solves the Dirac equation for an interaction term with reversed sign, −S[ψ˜](x). The conditions that the relativistic parameters must satisfy to characterize an even interaction are φr = 0, ar = dr for the non separated solutions, and h+r = −hr < ∞ or h+r = hr = ∞ for the separated solutions. These are exactly the conditions that we would obtain from the correspondence relationships between the non-relativistic and relativistic parameters, Equations (50, 51). In a similar way, we conclude that there is no point interaction which is odd under space reversal in one dimensional relativistic quantum mechanics.

4. Concluding Remarks

In this work we considered a distributional approach to treat singular point potentials in one-dimensional quantum mechanics. The method relies on the fact that any singular distribution concentrated at a point must be a linear combination of the δ-distribution and its derivatives (see Theorem 1). This, together with requirement (ii) (section 2), allows us to substitute the ill-defined product V(x)ψ(x) in the Schrödinger and Dirac equations by a well-defined interaction distribution with a given singular order. Then, the interaction distribution is completely determined by imposing the physical requirement that the probability current is conserved across the singularity—notice that even though the probability current is, in general, ill-defined at the singularity, it is well-defined on both sides of the singularity, so that in all the steps we only deal with well defined distributions. Implicit in the method is a locality condition, i.e., the interaction term depends both on singular potential and the wave function at the vicinities of the singular point.

The application of the distributional approach to both non-relativistic and relativistic quantum mechanics leads to a four-parameter family of point interactions, a result in agreement with that obtained by the method of self-adjoint extensions. It is important to notice that, while our results coincide with those of SAE in what regards the characterization of the family of all point interactions for Schrödinger's and Dirac's theories, there is an important conceptual difference between the two methods. While in SAE the interaction is defined only in terms of the boundary conditions around the singular point, in the present distributional approach the interaction is explicitly constructed from simple mathematical and physical requirements as an interaction distribution concentrated at the origin, which implies the boundary conditions satisfied by the wave function.

The fact that the interaction term is explicitly provided [following from the requirements (i)-(iii) in section 2] makes it particularly simple to analyze the symmetries of the interaction, as the investigation of parity transformations in sections 2, 3 shows. As one of the main results of the distributional approach such an analysis shows, in a simple way, why there is no odd point interaction in one dimension. Indeed, an immediate general consequence of the distributional method is that any regularization using δ′-converging sequences of functions for the potential must converge, in the sense of distributions, to an interaction distribution which cannot be odd under parity. We conjecture that a failure to satisfy this criterion is at the origin of the sometimes contradictory results appearing in the literature of regularization based treatments of zero-range interactions. Notice that, in general, these regularization methods assume from the start odd sequences of short-range potentials with the expectation of obtaining an “odd δ′-interaction” in the zero-range limit (even though, of course, this is no guarantee of convergence to an odd distribution, as clearly demonstrated by Šeba [16]).

Finally, we note that the distributional approach to point interactions developed here offers a mathematically rigorous and less abstract alternative to the (also rigorous) SAE method. In addition, the method is expected to generalize in a straightforward way to higher dimensions as well as to more general interactions in one or more dimensions which still present open questions, such as the Coulomb potential [44]. Preliminary work applying the distributional approach to the one-dimensional Coulomb interaction suggests that the fact that one obtains an explicit form for the interaction distribution, together with symmetry considerations, may help to clarify some ambiguities concerning a proper characterization of this interaction.

Conflict of Interest Statement

The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.

Acknowledgments

Wagner Monteiro thanks Fundaç~ao Araucária for financial support. Luiz A. Manzoni thanks the Office of Undergraduate Research, Concordia College, for partial financial support. José T. Lunardi thanks F. M. de Andrade for stimulating discussions at the beginning of this work.

Footnotes

1. ^Šeba [16] has also shown that the same result holds if one uses as Vϵ(x) a sequence of infinitely smooth functions converging to δ′(x) in the sense of distributions.

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Keywords: quantum mechanics in one dimension, point interactions, distribution theory, δ-interaction, δ′-interaction

Citation: Calçada M, Lunardi JT, Manzoni LA and Monteiro W (2014) Distributional approach to point interactions in one-dimensional quantum mechanics. Front. Physics 2:23. doi: 10.3389/fphy.2014.00023

Received: 31 January 2014; Accepted: 31 March 2014;
Published online: 24 April 2014.

Edited by:

Manuel Asorey, Universidad de Zaragoza, Spain

Reviewed by:

Alexandru Luca Mezincescu, University of Miami, USA
Manuel Gadella, University of Valladolid, Spain

Copyright © 2014 Calçada, Lunardi, Manzoni and Monteiro. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) or licensor are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.

*Correspondence: José T. Lunardi, Departamento de Matemática e Estatística, Universidade Estadual de Ponta Grossa, Avenida General Carlos Cavalcanti, 4748, 84030-900 Ponta Grossa, PR, Brazil e-mail: jttlunardi@uepg.br

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