We study the self-adjoint Hamiltonian that models the quantum dynamics of a one-dimensional three-body system consisting of a light particle interacting with two heavy ones through a zero-range force. For an attractive interaction we determine the behavior of the eigenvalues below the essential spectrum in the regime epsilon << 1, where epsilon is proportional to the square root of the mass ratio. We show that the n-th eigenvalue behaves as E-n(epsilon) = -alpha(2) + |sigma(n)| alpha(2)epsilon(2/3) + O(epsilon), where alpha is a negative constant that explicitly relates to the physical parameters and sigma(n) is either the n-th extremum or the n-th zero of the Airy function Ai, depending on the kind (respectively, bosons or fermions) of the two heavy particles. Additionally, we prove that the essential spectrum coincides with the half-line [ - alpha(2)/4+epsilon(2) , +infinity) .
The Born–Oppenheimer approximation for a 1D 2+1 particle system with zero-range interactions
Cacciapuoti C.
;Posilicano A.;Saberbaghi H.
2026-01-01
Abstract
We study the self-adjoint Hamiltonian that models the quantum dynamics of a one-dimensional three-body system consisting of a light particle interacting with two heavy ones through a zero-range force. For an attractive interaction we determine the behavior of the eigenvalues below the essential spectrum in the regime epsilon << 1, where epsilon is proportional to the square root of the mass ratio. We show that the n-th eigenvalue behaves as E-n(epsilon) = -alpha(2) + |sigma(n)| alpha(2)epsilon(2/3) + O(epsilon), where alpha is a negative constant that explicitly relates to the physical parameters and sigma(n) is either the n-th extremum or the n-th zero of the Airy function Ai, depending on the kind (respectively, bosons or fermions) of the two heavy particles. Additionally, we prove that the essential spectrum coincides with the half-line [ - alpha(2)/4+epsilon(2) , +infinity) .I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.



