One of the most important equations in mathematical physics is the time-independent Schrödinger equation,
(see this post for an introduction to the math behind the Schrodinger equation), which governs the evolution of the quantum wavefunction associated to a quantum particle with total energy
in a potential
One of the interesting notions regarding solutions to this equation (which one can recognize as an eigenvalue problem for the operator ) is the physical interpretation of the square magnitude
as a probability distribution for the associated quantum particle. In particular, one feature that distinguishes this equation from classical mechanics is the existence of a classically forbidden region
In classical mechanics, a particle with total energy will never be found in this region, for it would require the kinetic energy of the particle to be negative, which is impossible. However, solutions to the Schrödinger equation exhibit an explicitly quantum phenomenon known as tunneling, which reflects that there is a positive probability that one finds a quantum particle in a region which, if it were purely classical, would be impossible to reach.
It would make sense though that even if the probability of finding a particle in the classically forbidden region is nonzero, it would have to be quite small. An explicit calculation of a particle in a finite well (which is often done in a first quantum mechanics course) shows that the magnitude of the wavefunction decays exponentially in the classically forbidden region. However, despite remaining a nice heuristic argument, this argument does not answer many of the questions that one might ask about classically forbidden regions – namely, how does the geometry of the potential
control the rate of exponential decay? Even if one takes the simplest realistic potential of quantum mechanics – the quantum harmonic oscillator – one cannot definitely explain how the potential determines the decay rate of the solution.
Agmon’s Estimate
Agmon’s idea was to incorporate the geometric structure of the potential by creating a new geometrical object known as the Agmon metric.
Definition 1: For two vectors we define the inner product
where
Notice that this inner product induces the norm Similarly to how one may define the Euclidean distance between two points as the length of the shortest path between two points, one may now define the Agmon metric:
Definition 2: For define the Agmon metric
to
One may easily verify that this is indeed a metric. There are two other important properties satisfied by
Lemma 1: is locally Lipschitz continuous (thus differentiable a.e. by Rademacher’s theorem), and satisfies
whenever
is differentiable.
Proof: The first statement follows almost immediately from the fact that is a metric. On the other hand, when
is differentiable, by the triangle inequality one has
Now that we have defined the metric, we may now state Agmon’s main result:
Theorem (Agmon): Let be a closed bounded below operator with real spectrum, where
is real and continuous. Suppose that
is a compactly supported function, and let
be an eigenfunction of
Then, for any
one has
Remark: The theorem essentially states that as
i.e. it gives a rate of exponential decay of
depending on the shape of the potential
For example, if
then
so the theorem gives
Before jumping into the proof of the theorem, which is somewhat complicated, here’s one possible way for deriving the intuition and the key ideas for how the theorem can be proven.
Proof Idea: Our goal is to bound the integral of multiplied by some exponentially growing function. The problem naturally comes from the fact that the integral is over all of
whereas we can easily handle the integral on any compact set, and in particular, the admissible region
Thus, we only need to worry about the tail
We should certainly use in our proof at some point the fact that is an eigenfunction of our Schrödinger operator
i.e.
Since we are interested in bounding
above, one potential step would involve showing that some version of
is bounded below on
i.e.
Of course, so far we don’t even know that
but we can fix that by throttling the exponential at some point.
Now, if it were somehow possible to move the tail of , then by preceding remark we would be done. Let
be the cutoff function for the tail (that is, a smooth function that equals 1 on
and 0 on some compact set). Why would one expect
to be compactly supported? Well, in since
on the tail and
is a local operator (as a sum of a multiplication and a differential operator), then
in a neighborhood of the tail. But since
is bounded below by the previous step, the total mass of the function cannot dissipate – in particular, it has to move onto the set where
which is by construction a compact set.
Notice that we had to multiply our operator by
in order for this computation to make sense – this is precisely what motivates the conjugated version of the operator that appears in the lemmas.
Proof
Based on the outline above, we first want to show that the transformed version of is bounded below. This gives us the following lemma:
Lemma: Let Let
be supported in the set
for some
Then, there exists
s.t.
where is the transformed Hamiltonian.