Asymptotic completeness of long-range \(N\)-body quantum systems (Q1313182): Difference between revisions
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English | Asymptotic completeness of long-range \(N\)-body quantum systems |
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Asymptotic completeness of long-range \(N\)-body quantum systems (English)
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29 August 1996
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Asymptotic completeness, in the 2-body case, says that all states of the system fall into two categories: bound states and scattering states. The proof normally makes use of the classical phase space and the Enss method. In the \(N\)-body case, there may also be bound states for subsystems while the remaining constituents asymptotically evolve as free particles. For general \(N\) and short-range potentials, the proof of the existence of all wave operators and of asymptotic completeness was first given by Sigal and Soffer. Then Graf was able to replace phase-space analysis by a new type of analysis in configuration space. In a previous paper and in the present work, Dereziński extends Graf's method to the long-range case. For the construction of wave operators pertaining to each cluster of particles one has to modify the cluster hamiltonian appropriately in order to cope with the long-range interaction. One of the main results, proven in this article, is the existence of the ``asymptotic velocities'' \(P_\pm\) for \(t\to \pm \infty\). For the Enss condition (\(\mu> \sqrt{3}-1\), \(\mu\) is some exponent describing the decay of interactions at spatial infinity), Dereziński proves asymptotic completeness using the modified wave operators.
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2-body case
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bound states
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scattering states
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classical phase space
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Enss method
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short-range potentials
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asymptotic completeness
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long-range case
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cluster hamiltonian
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modified wave operators
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