Duality between the quantum inverted harmonic oscillator and inverse square potentials
Abstract
In this paper we show how the quantum mechanics of the inverted harmonic
oscillator can be mapped to the quantum mechanics of a particle in a
super-critical inverse square potential. We demonstrate this by relating both
of these systems to the Berry-Keating system with hamiltonian $H=(xp+px)/2$. It
has long been appreciated that the quantum mechanics of the inverse square
potential has an ambiguity in choosing a boundary condition near the origin and
we show how this ambiguity is mapped to the inverted harmonic oscillator
system. Imposing a boundary condition requires specifying a distance scale
where it is applied and changes to this scale come with a renormalization group
(RG) evolution of the boundary condition that ensures observables do not
directly depend on the scale (which is arbitrary). Physical scales instead
emerge as RG invariants of this evolution. The RG flow for the inverse square
potential is known to follow limit cycles describing the discrete breaking of
classical scale invariance in a simple example of a quantum anomaly, and we
find that limit cycles also occur for the inverted harmonic oscillator.
However, unlike the inverse square potential where the continuous scaling
symmetry is explicit, in the case of the inverted harmonic oscillator it is
hidden and occurs because the hamiltonian is part of a larger su(1,1) spectrum
generating algebra. Our map does not require the boundary condition to be
self-adjoint, as can be appropriate for systems that involve the absorption or
emission of particles.