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Quantum State Preparation Representation
Scale Invariance Breaking and Discrete Phase Invariance in Few-Body Problems
arXiv
Authors: Satoshi Ohya
Year
2026
Paper ID
3851
Status
Preprint
Abstract Read
~2 min
Abstract Words
170
Citations
N/A
Abstract
Scale invariance in quantum mechanics can be broken in several ways. A well-known example is the breakdown of continuous scale invariance to discrete scale invariance, whose typical realization is the Efimov effect of three-body problems. Here we discuss yet another discrete symmetry to which continuous scale invariance can be broken: discrete phase invariance. We first revisit the one-body problem on the half line in the presence of an inverse-square potential - the simplest example of nontrivial scale-invariant quantum mechanics - and show that continuous scale invariance can be broken to discrete phase invariance in a small window of coupling constant. We also show that discrete phase invariance manifests itself as circularly distributed simple poles on Riemann sheets of the S-matrix. We then present three examples of few-body problems that exhibit discrete phase invariance. These examples are the one-body Aharonov-Bohm problem, a two-body problem of nonidentical particles in two dimensions, and a three-body problem of nonidentical particles in one dimension, all of which contain a codimension-two "magnetic" flux in configuration spaces.
Why This Paper Matters
- This paper contributes to the Quantum State Preparation & Representation research area in the Quantum Articles archive.
- It adds a 2026 reference point for readers tracking recent quantum research.
- Scale invariance in quantum mechanics can be broken in several ways.
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