Template:Short description

A bound state is a composite of two or more fundamental building blocks, such as particles, atoms, or bodies, that behaves as a single object and in which energy is required to split them.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

In quantum physics, a bound state is a quantum state of a particle subject to a potential such that the particle has a tendency to remain localized in one or more regions of space.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> The potential may be external or it may be the result of the presence of another particle; in the latter case, one can equivalently define a bound state as a state representing two or more particles whose interaction energy exceeds the total energy of each separate particle. One consequence is that, given a potential vanishing at infinity, negative-energy states must be bound. The energy spectrum of the set of bound states are most commonly discrete, unlike scattering states of free particles, which have a continuous spectrum.

Although not bound states in the strict sense, metastable states with a net positive interaction energy, but long decay time, are often considered unstable bound states as well and are called "quasi-bound states".<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Examples include radionuclides and Rydberg atoms.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

In relativistic quantum field theory, a stable bound state of Template:Mvar particles with masses <math>\{m_k\}_{k=1}^n</math> corresponds to a pole in the S-matrix with a center-of-mass energy less than <math>\textstyle\sum_k m_k</math>. An unstable bound state shows up as a pole with a complex center-of-mass energy.

ExamplesEdit

File:Particle overview.svg
An overview of the various families of elementary and composite particles, and the theories describing their interactions

Template:Cite journal </ref><ref> Template:Cite journal </ref><ref> Template:Cite journal </ref> The JCH Hamiltonian also supports two-polariton bound states when the photon-atom interaction is sufficiently strong.<ref> Template:Cite journal </ref>

DefinitionEdit

Template:See also Let [[Measure space#Important classes of measure spaces|Template:Math-finite measure space]] <math>(X, \mathcal A, \mu)</math> be a probability space associated with separable complex Hilbert space <math>H</math>. Define a one-parameter group of unitary operators <math> (U_t)_{t\in \mathbb{R}} </math>, a density operator <math>\rho = \rho(t_0) </math> and an observable <math>T</math> on <math>H</math>. Let <math>\mu(T,\rho)</math> be the induced probability distribution of <math>T</math> with respect to <math>\rho</math>. Then the evolution

<math>\rho(t_0)\mapsto [U_t(\rho)](t_0) = \rho(t_0 +t)</math>

is bound with respect to <math>T</math> if

<math>\lim_{R \rightarrow \infty}{\sup_{t \geq t_0}{\mu(T,\rho(t))(\mathbb{R}_{> R})}} = 0 </math>,

where <math>\mathbb{R}_{>R} = \lbrace x \in \mathbb{R} \mid x > R \rbrace </math>.{{ safesubst:#invoke:Unsubst||date=__DATE__ |$B= Template:Fix }}<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

A quantum particle is in a bound state if at no point in time it is found “too far away" from any finite region <math>R\subset X</math>. Using a wave function representation, for example, this means<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

<math>\begin{align}

0 &= \lim_{R\to\infty}{\mathbb{P}(\text{particle measured inside }X\setminus R)} \\ &= \lim_{R\to\infty}{\int_{X\setminus R}|\psi(x)|^2\,d\mu(x)}, \end{align}</math> such that

<math>\int_X{|\psi(x)|^{2}\,d\mu(x)} < \infty.</math>

In general, a quantum state is a bound state if and only if it is finitely normalizable for all times <math>t\in\mathbb{R}</math> and remains spatially localized.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> Furthermore, a bound state lies within the pure point part of the spectrum of <math>T</math> if and only if it is an eigenvector of <math>T</math>.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

More informally, "boundedness" results foremost from the choice of domain of definition and characteristics of the state rather than the observable.<ref group=nb>See Expectation value (quantum mechanics) for an example.</ref> For a concrete example: let <math>H := L^2(\mathbb{R}) </math> and let <math>T</math> be the position operator. Given compactly supported <math>\rho = \rho(0) \in H</math> and <math>[-1,1] \subseteq \mathrm{Supp}(\rho)</math>.

  • If the state evolution of <math>\rho</math> "moves this wave package to the right", e.g., if <math>[t-1,t+1] \in \mathrm{Supp}(\rho(t)) </math> for all <math>t \geq 0</math>, then <math>\rho</math> is not bound state with respect to position.
  • If <math>\rho</math> does not change in time, i.e., <math>\rho(t) = \rho</math> for all <math>t \geq 0</math>, then <math>\rho</math> is bound with respect to position.
  • More generally: If the state evolution of <math>\rho</math> "just moves <math>\rho</math> inside a bounded domain", then <math>\rho</math> is bound with respect to position.

PropertiesEdit

Template:See also As finitely normalizable states must lie within the pure point part of the spectrum, bound states must lie within the pure point part. However, as Neumann and Wigner pointed out, it is possible for the energy of a bound state to be located in the continuous part of the spectrum. This phenomenon is referred to as bound state in the continuum.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref><ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>

Position-bound statesEdit

Consider the one-particle Schrödinger equation. If a state has energy <math display="inline"> E < \max{\left(\lim_{x\to\infty}{V(x)}, \lim_{x\to-\infty}{V(x)}\right)}</math>, then the wavefunction Template:Mvar satisfies, for some <math>X > 0</math>

<math>\frac{\psi^{\prime\prime}}{\psi}=\frac{2m}{\hbar^2}(V(x)-E) > 0\text{ for }x > X</math>

so that Template:Mvar is exponentially suppressed at large Template:Mvar. This behaviour is well-studied for smoothly varying potentials in the WKB approximation for wavefunction, where an oscillatory behaviour is observed if the right hand side of the equation is negative and growing/decaying behaviour if it is positive.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Hence, negative energy-states are bound if <math>V(x)</math> vanishes at infinity.

Non-degeneracy in one-dimensional bound statesEdit

One-dimensional bound states can be shown to be non-degenerate in energy for well-behaved wavefunctions that decay to zero at infinities. This need not hold true for wavefunctions in higher dimensions. Due to the property of non-degenerate states, one-dimensional bound states can always be expressed as real wavefunctions.

Node theoremEdit

Node theorem states that <math>n\text{th}</math> bound wavefunction ordered according to increasing energy has exactly <math>n-1</math> nodes, i.e., points <math>x=a</math> where <math>\psi(a)=0 \neq \psi'(a)</math>. Due to the form of Schrödinger's time independent equations, it is not possible for a physical wavefunction to have <math>\psi(a) = 0 = \psi'(a)</math> since it corresponds to <math>\psi(x)=0</math> solution.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

RequirementsEdit

A boson with mass Template:Math mediating a weakly coupled interaction produces an Yukawa-like interaction potential,

<math>V(r) = \pm\frac{\alpha_\chi}{r} e^{- \frac{r}{\lambda\!\!\!\frac{}{\ }_\chi}}</math>,

where <math>\alpha_\chi=g^2/4\pi</math>, Template:Math is the gauge coupling constant, and Template:Math is the reduced Compton wavelength. A scalar boson produces a universally attractive potential, whereas a vector attracts particles to antiparticles but repels like pairs. For two particles of mass Template:Math and Template:Math, the Bohr radius of the system becomes

<math>a_0=\frac{{\lambda\!\!\!^{{}^\underline{\ \ }}}_1 + {\lambda\!\!\!^{{}^\underline{\ \ }}}_2}{\alpha_\chi}</math>

and yields the dimensionless number

<math>D=\frac{{\lambda\!\!\!^{{}^\underline{\ \ }}}_\chi}{a_0} = \alpha_\chi\frac{{\lambda\!\!\!^{{}^\underline{\ \ }}}_\chi}{{\lambda\!\!\!^{{}^\underline{\ \ }}}_1 + {\lambda\!\!\!^{{}^\underline{\ \ }}}_2} = \alpha_\chi\frac{m_1+m_2}{m_\chi}</math>.

In order for the first bound state to exist at all, <math>D\gtrsim 0.8</math>. Because the photon is massless, Template:Math is infinite for electromagnetism. For the weak interaction, the Z boson's mass is Template:Val, which prevents the formation of bound states between most particles, as it is Template:Val the proton's mass and Template:Val the electron's mass.

Note, however, that, if the Higgs interaction did not break electroweak symmetry at the electroweak scale, then the SU(2) weak interaction would become confining.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>

See alsoEdit

RemarksEdit

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ReferencesEdit

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Further readingEdit