简单极点与简单拐点合并对Schrödinger算子的wkb理论结构

Q2 Mathematics
S. Kamimoto, T. Kawai, T. Koike, Yoshitsugu Takei
{"title":"简单极点与简单拐点合并对Schrödinger算子的wkb理论结构","authors":"S. Kamimoto, T. Kawai, T. Koike, Yoshitsugu Takei","doi":"10.1215/0023608X-2009-007","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"A Schrödinger equation with a merging pair of a simple pole and a simple turning point (called MPPT equation for short) is studied from the viewpoint of exact Wentzel-Kramers-Brillouin (WKB) analysis. In a way parallel to the case of mergingturning-points (MTP) equations, we construct a WKB-theoretic transformation that brings anMPPTequation to its canonical form (the ∞-Whittaker equation in this case). Combining this transformation with the explicit description of the Voros coefficient for the Whittaker equation in terms of the Bernoulli numbers found by Koike, we discuss analytic properties of Borel-transformed WKB solutions of an MPPT equation. 0. Introduction The principal aim of this article is to form a basis for the exact WKB analysis of a Schrödinger equation (0.1) ( d dx2 − ηQ(x, η) ) ψ = 0 (η: a large parameter) with one simple turning point and with one simple pole in the potential Q. As [Ko1] and [Ko3] emphasize, the Borel transform of a WKB solution of (0.1) displays, near the simple pole singularity, behavior similar to that near a simple turning point. Hence it is natural to expect that such an equation plays an important role in exact WKB analysis in the large. Such an expectation has recently been enhanced by the discovery (see [KoT]) that the Voros coefficient of a WKB solution of (0.1) with (0.2) Q = 1 4 + α x + η−2 γ x2 (α, γ: fixed complex numbers) can be explicitly written down with the help of the Bernoulli numbers. The potential Q given by (0.2) plays an important role in Section 2; the Schrödinger Kyoto Journal of Mathematics, Vol. 50, No. 1 (2010), 101–164 DOI 10.1215/0023608X-2009-007, © 2010 by Kyoto University Received July 30, 2009. Revised October 2, 2009. Accepted October 9, 2009. Mathematics Subject Classification: Primary 34M60; Secondary 34E20, 34M35, 35A27, 35A30. Authors’ research supported in part by Japan Society for the Promotion of Science Grants-in-Aid 20340028, 21740098, and 21340029. 102 Kamimoto, Kawai, Koike, and Takei equation with the potential Q of the form (0.2), that is, the Whittaker equation with a large parameter η, gives us a WKB-theoretic canonical form of a Schrödinger equation with one simple turning point and with one simple pole in its potential. We note that the parameter α contained in the Whittaker equation in Section 2 is an infinite series α(η) = ∑ k≥0 αkη −k (αk: a constant), and we call such an equation the ∞-Whittaker equation when we want to emphasize that α is not a genuine constant but an infinite series as above. In order to make a semiglobal study of a Schrödinger equation with one simple turning point and with a simple pole in its potential, we let the simple pole singular point merge with the turning point and observe what kind of equation appears. For example, what if we let α tend to zero in (0.2) with γ being kept intact? Interestingly enough, the resulting equation is what we call a ghost equation (see [Ko2]); we have been wondering where we should place the class of ghost equations in regard to the whole WKB analysis. A ghost equation has no turning point by its definition (cf. Remark 1.1 in Section 1); still, a WKB solution of a ghost equation displays singularity similar to that which a WKB solution normally has near a turning point. The singularity is due to the singularities contained in the coefficients of η−k (k ≥ 1) in the potential Q (see [Ko2] for details; there a ghost (point) is tentatively called a “new” turning point). In view of the above observation, we regard a Schrödinger equation with one simple turning point and with one simple pole in its potential as an equation obtained through perturbation of a ghost equation by a simple pole term aq(x,a)/x, where a is a complex parameter and q(x,a) is a holomorphic function defined on a neighborhood of (x,a) = (0,0). An equation obtained by such a procedure is called an equation with a merging pair of a simple pole and a simple turning point, or, for short, an MPPT equation. Precisely speaking, we call a Schrödinger equation (0.1) an MPPT equation if its potential Q depends also on an auxiliary parameter a and has the form (0.3) Q = Q0(x,a) x + η−1 Q1(x,a) x + η−2 Q2(x,a) x2 , where Qj(x,a) (j = 0,1,2) are holomorphic near (x,a) = (0,0) and Q0(x,a) satisfies the following conditions (0.4) and (0.5): Q0(0, a) = 0 if a = 0, (0.4) Q0(x,0) = c (0) 0 x + O(x ) holds with c 0 being (0.5) a constant different from 0. Clearly we find a ghost equation at a = 0; furthermore, the implicit function theorem together with the assumption (0.5) guarantees the existence of a unique holomorphic function x(a) that satisfies (0.6) Q0 ( x(a), a ) = 0. Assumption (0.4) entails (0.7) x(a) = 0 if a = 0, On the WKB-theoretic structure of an MPPT operator 103 and the assumption (0.5) guarantees that, for a sufficiently small a( = 0), x = x(a) is a simple turning point of the operator in question. As the term “an MPPT equation” indicates, it is a counterpart of an MTP equation in our context. An MTP equation, that is, a merging-turning-points equation introduced in [AKT4] contains, by definition, two simple turning points that merge into one double turning point as the parameter t tends to zero; whereas, in an MPPT equation, a simple pole and a simple turning point merge into a ghost point where neither zero nor singularity is observed in the highest degree (i.e., degree zero) in η part of the potential. The parallelism of these two notions is not a superficial one. The reduction of an MPPT equation to a canonical one is achieved in Sections 1 and 2 in a way parallel to that used in the reduction of MTP equation to a canonical one. First, in Section 1 we construct a WKB-theoretic transformation that brings an MPPT equation with the parameter a being zero to a particular ∞-Whittaker equation, that is, the ∞Whittaker equation with the top degree part of the parameter α(η) being zero (i.e., α(η) = ∑ k≥1 αkη −k), and then in Section 2 we construct the transformation of a generic (i.e., a = 0) MPPT equation to the ∞-Whittaker equation in the form of a perturbation series in a, starting with the transformation constructed in Section 1. In Sections 1 and 2 we focus our attention on the formal aspect of the problem, and the estimation of the growth order of the coefficients that appear in several formal series is given separately in Appendices A and B. One important implication of the estimates given in Appendix B is that they endow the formal transformation with an analytic meaning as a microdifferential operator through the Borel transformation. Furthermore, as is shown in Theorems 1.7 and 2.7, the action of the resulting microdifferential operator upon multivalued analytic functions such as Borel-transformed WKB solutions is described in terms of an integro-differential operator of particular type; its kernel function contains a differential operator of infinite order in x-variable. Thus it is of local character in x-variable, whereas it is suited for the global study related to the resurgence phenomena in y-variable (see, e.g., [SKK], [K] for the notion of a differential operator of infinite order; see also [AKT4], which first used a differential operator of infinite order in exact WKB analysis). As the domain of definition of the integrodifferential operator may be chosen to be uniform with respect to the parameter a (see Remark 2.3), our results in Section 2 are of semiglobal character, as is noted in Remark 4.1. This uniformity is one of the most important advantages in introducing the notion of an MPPT operator. It is worth emphasizing that the uniformity becomes clearly visible through the Borel transformation. In order to use the results obtained in Section 2 for the detailed study of the structure of Borel-transformed WKB solutions of an MPPT equation, we first study in Section 3 analytic properties of Borel-transformed WKB solutions of the Whittaker equation, and then in Section 4 we analyze Borel-transformed WKB solutions of the ∞-Whittaker equation using the results obtained in Section 3. The basis of the study in Section 3 is a recent result of Koike [KoT], and the analysis in Section 4 makes essential use of the estimate (B.3) of the coefficients {αk(a)}k≥0 104 Kamimoto, Kawai, Koike, and Takei of the parameter α(a, η) = ∑ k≥0 αk(a)η −k; the effect of this infinite series that appears in the ∞-Whittaker equation is grasped as a microdifferential operator acting on Borel-transformed WKB solutions of the Whittaker equation. Combining all the results obtained in Sections 2 and 4, we summarize in Section 5 basic properties of Borel-transformed WKB solutions of an MPPT equation with a = 0. 1. Construction of the transformation to the canonical form, I: The case where a = 0 The purpose of this section is to show how to construct the Borel-transformable series (1.1) x(x̃, η) = ∑ k≥0 x (0) k (x̃)η −k","PeriodicalId":50142,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Mathematics of Kyoto University","volume":"50 1","pages":"101-164"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2010-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://sci-hub-pdf.com/10.1215/0023608X-2009-007","citationCount":"20","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"On the WKB-theoretic structure of a Schrödinger operator with a merging pair of a simple pole and a simple turning point\",\"authors\":\"S. Kamimoto, T. Kawai, T. Koike, Yoshitsugu Takei\",\"doi\":\"10.1215/0023608X-2009-007\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"A Schrödinger equation with a merging pair of a simple pole and a simple turning point (called MPPT equation for short) is studied from the viewpoint of exact Wentzel-Kramers-Brillouin (WKB) analysis. In a way parallel to the case of mergingturning-points (MTP) equations, we construct a WKB-theoretic transformation that brings anMPPTequation to its canonical form (the ∞-Whittaker equation in this case). Combining this transformation with the explicit description of the Voros coefficient for the Whittaker equation in terms of the Bernoulli numbers found by Koike, we discuss analytic properties of Borel-transformed WKB solutions of an MPPT equation. 0. Introduction The principal aim of this article is to form a basis for the exact WKB analysis of a Schrödinger equation (0.1) ( d dx2 − ηQ(x, η) ) ψ = 0 (η: a large parameter) with one simple turning point and with one simple pole in the potential Q. As [Ko1] and [Ko3] emphasize, the Borel transform of a WKB solution of (0.1) displays, near the simple pole singularity, behavior similar to that near a simple turning point. Hence it is natural to expect that such an equation plays an important role in exact WKB analysis in the large. Such an expectation has recently been enhanced by the discovery (see [KoT]) that the Voros coefficient of a WKB solution of (0.1) with (0.2) Q = 1 4 + α x + η−2 γ x2 (α, γ: fixed complex numbers) can be explicitly written down with the help of the Bernoulli numbers. The potential Q given by (0.2) plays an important role in Section 2; the Schrödinger Kyoto Journal of Mathematics, Vol. 50, No. 1 (2010), 101–164 DOI 10.1215/0023608X-2009-007, © 2010 by Kyoto University Received July 30, 2009. Revised October 2, 2009. Accepted October 9, 2009. Mathematics Subject Classification: Primary 34M60; Secondary 34E20, 34M35, 35A27, 35A30. Authors’ research supported in part by Japan Society for the Promotion of Science Grants-in-Aid 20340028, 21740098, and 21340029. 102 Kamimoto, Kawai, Koike, and Takei equation with the potential Q of the form (0.2), that is, the Whittaker equation with a large parameter η, gives us a WKB-theoretic canonical form of a Schrödinger equation with one simple turning point and with one simple pole in its potential. We note that the parameter α contained in the Whittaker equation in Section 2 is an infinite series α(η) = ∑ k≥0 αkη −k (αk: a constant), and we call such an equation the ∞-Whittaker equation when we want to emphasize that α is not a genuine constant but an infinite series as above. In order to make a semiglobal study of a Schrödinger equation with one simple turning point and with a simple pole in its potential, we let the simple pole singular point merge with the turning point and observe what kind of equation appears. For example, what if we let α tend to zero in (0.2) with γ being kept intact? Interestingly enough, the resulting equation is what we call a ghost equation (see [Ko2]); we have been wondering where we should place the class of ghost equations in regard to the whole WKB analysis. A ghost equation has no turning point by its definition (cf. Remark 1.1 in Section 1); still, a WKB solution of a ghost equation displays singularity similar to that which a WKB solution normally has near a turning point. The singularity is due to the singularities contained in the coefficients of η−k (k ≥ 1) in the potential Q (see [Ko2] for details; there a ghost (point) is tentatively called a “new” turning point). In view of the above observation, we regard a Schrödinger equation with one simple turning point and with one simple pole in its potential as an equation obtained through perturbation of a ghost equation by a simple pole term aq(x,a)/x, where a is a complex parameter and q(x,a) is a holomorphic function defined on a neighborhood of (x,a) = (0,0). An equation obtained by such a procedure is called an equation with a merging pair of a simple pole and a simple turning point, or, for short, an MPPT equation. Precisely speaking, we call a Schrödinger equation (0.1) an MPPT equation if its potential Q depends also on an auxiliary parameter a and has the form (0.3) Q = Q0(x,a) x + η−1 Q1(x,a) x + η−2 Q2(x,a) x2 , where Qj(x,a) (j = 0,1,2) are holomorphic near (x,a) = (0,0) and Q0(x,a) satisfies the following conditions (0.4) and (0.5): Q0(0, a) = 0 if a = 0, (0.4) Q0(x,0) = c (0) 0 x + O(x ) holds with c 0 being (0.5) a constant different from 0. Clearly we find a ghost equation at a = 0; furthermore, the implicit function theorem together with the assumption (0.5) guarantees the existence of a unique holomorphic function x(a) that satisfies (0.6) Q0 ( x(a), a ) = 0. Assumption (0.4) entails (0.7) x(a) = 0 if a = 0, On the WKB-theoretic structure of an MPPT operator 103 and the assumption (0.5) guarantees that, for a sufficiently small a( = 0), x = x(a) is a simple turning point of the operator in question. As the term “an MPPT equation” indicates, it is a counterpart of an MTP equation in our context. An MTP equation, that is, a merging-turning-points equation introduced in [AKT4] contains, by definition, two simple turning points that merge into one double turning point as the parameter t tends to zero; whereas, in an MPPT equation, a simple pole and a simple turning point merge into a ghost point where neither zero nor singularity is observed in the highest degree (i.e., degree zero) in η part of the potential. The parallelism of these two notions is not a superficial one. The reduction of an MPPT equation to a canonical one is achieved in Sections 1 and 2 in a way parallel to that used in the reduction of MTP equation to a canonical one. First, in Section 1 we construct a WKB-theoretic transformation that brings an MPPT equation with the parameter a being zero to a particular ∞-Whittaker equation, that is, the ∞Whittaker equation with the top degree part of the parameter α(η) being zero (i.e., α(η) = ∑ k≥1 αkη −k), and then in Section 2 we construct the transformation of a generic (i.e., a = 0) MPPT equation to the ∞-Whittaker equation in the form of a perturbation series in a, starting with the transformation constructed in Section 1. In Sections 1 and 2 we focus our attention on the formal aspect of the problem, and the estimation of the growth order of the coefficients that appear in several formal series is given separately in Appendices A and B. One important implication of the estimates given in Appendix B is that they endow the formal transformation with an analytic meaning as a microdifferential operator through the Borel transformation. Furthermore, as is shown in Theorems 1.7 and 2.7, the action of the resulting microdifferential operator upon multivalued analytic functions such as Borel-transformed WKB solutions is described in terms of an integro-differential operator of particular type; its kernel function contains a differential operator of infinite order in x-variable. Thus it is of local character in x-variable, whereas it is suited for the global study related to the resurgence phenomena in y-variable (see, e.g., [SKK], [K] for the notion of a differential operator of infinite order; see also [AKT4], which first used a differential operator of infinite order in exact WKB analysis). As the domain of definition of the integrodifferential operator may be chosen to be uniform with respect to the parameter a (see Remark 2.3), our results in Section 2 are of semiglobal character, as is noted in Remark 4.1. This uniformity is one of the most important advantages in introducing the notion of an MPPT operator. It is worth emphasizing that the uniformity becomes clearly visible through the Borel transformation. In order to use the results obtained in Section 2 for the detailed study of the structure of Borel-transformed WKB solutions of an MPPT equation, we first study in Section 3 analytic properties of Borel-transformed WKB solutions of the Whittaker equation, and then in Section 4 we analyze Borel-transformed WKB solutions of the ∞-Whittaker equation using the results obtained in Section 3. The basis of the study in Section 3 is a recent result of Koike [KoT], and the analysis in Section 4 makes essential use of the estimate (B.3) of the coefficients {αk(a)}k≥0 104 Kamimoto, Kawai, Koike, and Takei of the parameter α(a, η) = ∑ k≥0 αk(a)η −k; the effect of this infinite series that appears in the ∞-Whittaker equation is grasped as a microdifferential operator acting on Borel-transformed WKB solutions of the Whittaker equation. Combining all the results obtained in Sections 2 and 4, we summarize in Section 5 basic properties of Borel-transformed WKB solutions of an MPPT equation with a = 0. 1. Construction of the transformation to the canonical form, I: The case where a = 0 The purpose of this section is to show how to construct the Borel-transformable series (1.1) x(x̃, η) = ∑ k≥0 x (0) k (x̃)η −k\",\"PeriodicalId\":50142,\"journal\":{\"name\":\"Journal of Mathematics of Kyoto University\",\"volume\":\"50 1\",\"pages\":\"101-164\"},\"PeriodicalIF\":0.0000,\"publicationDate\":\"2010-01-01\",\"publicationTypes\":\"Journal Article\",\"fieldsOfStudy\":null,\"isOpenAccess\":false,\"openAccessPdf\":\"https://sci-hub-pdf.com/10.1215/0023608X-2009-007\",\"citationCount\":\"20\",\"resultStr\":null,\"platform\":\"Semanticscholar\",\"paperid\":null,\"PeriodicalName\":\"Journal of Mathematics of Kyoto University\",\"FirstCategoryId\":\"1085\",\"ListUrlMain\":\"https://doi.org/10.1215/0023608X-2009-007\",\"RegionNum\":0,\"RegionCategory\":null,\"ArticlePicture\":[],\"TitleCN\":null,\"AbstractTextCN\":null,\"PMCID\":null,\"EPubDate\":\"\",\"PubModel\":\"\",\"JCR\":\"Q2\",\"JCRName\":\"Mathematics\",\"Score\":null,\"Total\":0}","platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of Mathematics of Kyoto University","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1215/0023608X-2009-007","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"Mathematics","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 20

摘要

本文从精确WKB分析的角度研究了具有简单极点和简单拐点合并对的Schrödinger方程(简称MPPT方程)。以一种与合并拐点(MTP)方程类似的方式,我们构造了一个wkb理论变换,将mpp方程转化为其标准形式(在这种情况下为∞-Whittaker方程)。结合这种变换和用Koike发现的伯努利数对Whittaker方程的Voros系数的显式描述,讨论了MPPT方程borel变换WKB解的解析性质。0. 本文的主要目的是形成一个精确的WKB分析的基础Schrödinger方程(0.1)(d dx2−η q (x, η)) ψ = 0 (η:一个大参数)具有一个简单的拐点和一个简单的极位q。正如[Ko1]和[Ko3]所强调的,(0.1)的WKB解的Borel变换在简单极奇点附近表现出类似于在简单拐点附近的行为。因此,很自然地期望这样的方程在大规模的精确WKB分析中起重要作用。这种期望最近被一项发现(见[KoT])所加强,即(0.2)Q = 14 + α x + η−2 γ x2 (α, γ:固定复数)的(0.1)WKB解的Voros系数可以在伯努利数的帮助下明确地写出来。由(0.2)给出的电位Q在第2节中起重要作用;Schrödinger京都数学杂志,Vol. 50, No. 1 (2010), 101-164 DOI 10.1215/0023608X-2009-007,©2010 by Kyoto University,收于2009年7月30日。2009年10月2日修订。2009年10月9日录用。数学学科分类:小学34M60;二级34E20, 34M35, 35A27, 35A30。作者的研究得到了日本科学促进会资助项目(20340028、21740098和21340029)的部分支持。102 Kamimoto, Kawai, Koike, and Takei方程,其势Q的形式为(0.2),即具有大参数η的Whittaker方程,给出了具有一个简单拐点和一个简单极点的Schrödinger方程的wkb理论标准形式。在第2节中,我们注意到Whittaker方程中包含的参数α是一个无穷级数α(η) =∑k≥0 αkη−k (αk:一个常数),当我们要强调α不是一个真正的常数而是一个无穷级数时,我们称这样的方程为∞-Whittaker方程。为了研究具有一个简单拐点和一个简单极势的Schrödinger方程的半全局问题,我们让简单极奇点与拐点合并,观察会出现什么样的方程。例如,如果我们让α在(0.2)中趋于零而γ保持不变会怎么样?有趣的是,结果方程就是我们所说的鬼方程(参见[Ko2]);我们一直在想,在整个WKB分析中,我们应该把这类鬼方程放在哪里。根据鬼方程的定义,它没有拐点(参见第1节注释1.1);尽管如此,鬼方程的WKB解仍然显示出与WKB解在拐点附近通常具有的奇点相似的奇点。奇点是由于势Q中η−k (k≥1)的系数中包含的奇点(详见[Ko2];有一个鬼(点)暂称“新”转折点。鉴于上述观察,我们把一个具有一个简单拐点和一个简单极点的Schrödinger方程看作是用一个简单极点项aq(x,a)/x扰动鬼方程得到的方程,其中a是一个复参数,q(x,a)是定义在(x,a) =(0,0)的邻域上的全纯函数。用这种方法得到的方程称为简单极点和简单拐点合并对方程,或简称为MPPT方程。准确地讲,我们称之为薛定谔方程(0.1)翻译一个MPPT方程如果它潜在的问还取决于一个辅助参数和的形式(0.3)Q = Q0 (x) x +η−1 Q1 (x) x +η−2 x2 Q2 (x),在Qj (x) (j = 0, 1, 2)附近的全纯(x) =(0, 0)和(x)满足以下条件(0.4)和(0.5):Q0 (0) = 0 = 0, (0.4) Q0 (x, 0) = c (0) 0 x + O (x)与c从0 0(0.5)一个常数不同。显然我们在a = 0处找到了一个鬼方程;更进一步,隐函数定理和假设(0.5)保证了满足(0.6)Q0 (x(a), a) = 0的唯一全纯函数x(a)的存在性。假设(0.4)需要(0.7)x(a) = 0,如果a = 0,在MPPT算子103的wkb理论结构上,假设(0.5)保证,对于足够小的a(= 0), x = x(a)是所讨论算子的一个简单拐点。正如术语“MPPT方程”所表明的那样,它在我们的上下文中是MTP方程的对应物。 一个MTP方程,即[AKT4]中引入的合并拐点方程,根据定义包含两个简单拐点,当参数t趋于零时合并为一个双拐点;然而,在MPPT方程中,一个简单的极点和一个简单的转折点合并成一个鬼点,在η部分的最高阶(即零阶)中既没有观察到零,也没有观察到奇点。这两个概念的相似并不是表面上的。在第1节和第2节中实现了将MPPT方程简化为规范方程的方法,这种方法与将MTP方程简化为规范方程的方法类似。首先,在第一节我们构造一个翻译WKB-theoretic转换带来一个MPPT方程与参数为零到一个特定∞惠塔克方程,也就是说,惠特克∞方程与最高学位的一部分参数α(η)为零(即α(η)=∑k≥1αkη−k),然后在第二节我们构造转换的通用翻译(例如,= 0)MPPT方程的∞惠塔克方程在微扰级数的形式,从第1节中构造的转换开始。在第1节和第2节中,我们将注意力集中在问题的形式方面,并且在附录A和B中分别给出了出现在几个形式级数中的系数的增长顺序的估计。附录B中给出的估计的一个重要含义是它们通过Borel变换赋予形式变换作为微微分算子的解析意义。此外,如定理1.7和2.7所示,由此产生的微微分算子对多值解析函数(如borell变换的WKB解)的作用用特定类型的积分微分算子来描述;它的核函数包含一个无穷阶的x变量微分算子。因此,它在x变量中具有局部特征,而它适合于与y变量中的复苏现象相关的全局研究(例如,见[SKK], [K]中的无限阶微分算子的概念;参见[AKT4],它在精确WKB分析中首次使用了无限阶微分算子)。由于积分微分算子的定义域可以选择相对于参数a是一致的(见注2.3),我们在第2节中的结果具有半全局特征,如注4.1所述。这种一致性是引入MPPT操作符概念时最重要的优点之一。值得强调的是,通过Borel变换,均匀性变得清晰可见。为了利用第2节的结果详细研究MPPT方程borel -变换WKB解的结构,我们首先在第3节中研究了Whittaker方程borel -变换WKB解的解析性质,然后在第4节中利用第3节的结果分析∞-Whittaker方程的borel -变换WKB解。第3节研究的基础是Koike [KoT]的最新结果,第4节的分析主要利用了系数{αk(a)}k≥0 104 Kamimoto, Kawai, Koike和Takei的参数α(a, η) =∑k≥0 αk(a)η−k的估计(B.3);∞-Whittaker方程中出现的这个无穷级数的效应被理解为作用于Whittaker方程borell变换的WKB解的微微分算子。结合第2节和第4节的所有结果,我们在第5节中总结了a = 0的MPPT方程borel变换WKB解的基本性质。1. 本节的目的是展示如何构造borel -可变换级数(1.1)x(x), η) =∑k≥0 x(0) k (x)η−k
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
On the WKB-theoretic structure of a Schrödinger operator with a merging pair of a simple pole and a simple turning point
A Schrödinger equation with a merging pair of a simple pole and a simple turning point (called MPPT equation for short) is studied from the viewpoint of exact Wentzel-Kramers-Brillouin (WKB) analysis. In a way parallel to the case of mergingturning-points (MTP) equations, we construct a WKB-theoretic transformation that brings anMPPTequation to its canonical form (the ∞-Whittaker equation in this case). Combining this transformation with the explicit description of the Voros coefficient for the Whittaker equation in terms of the Bernoulli numbers found by Koike, we discuss analytic properties of Borel-transformed WKB solutions of an MPPT equation. 0. Introduction The principal aim of this article is to form a basis for the exact WKB analysis of a Schrödinger equation (0.1) ( d dx2 − ηQ(x, η) ) ψ = 0 (η: a large parameter) with one simple turning point and with one simple pole in the potential Q. As [Ko1] and [Ko3] emphasize, the Borel transform of a WKB solution of (0.1) displays, near the simple pole singularity, behavior similar to that near a simple turning point. Hence it is natural to expect that such an equation plays an important role in exact WKB analysis in the large. Such an expectation has recently been enhanced by the discovery (see [KoT]) that the Voros coefficient of a WKB solution of (0.1) with (0.2) Q = 1 4 + α x + η−2 γ x2 (α, γ: fixed complex numbers) can be explicitly written down with the help of the Bernoulli numbers. The potential Q given by (0.2) plays an important role in Section 2; the Schrödinger Kyoto Journal of Mathematics, Vol. 50, No. 1 (2010), 101–164 DOI 10.1215/0023608X-2009-007, © 2010 by Kyoto University Received July 30, 2009. Revised October 2, 2009. Accepted October 9, 2009. Mathematics Subject Classification: Primary 34M60; Secondary 34E20, 34M35, 35A27, 35A30. Authors’ research supported in part by Japan Society for the Promotion of Science Grants-in-Aid 20340028, 21740098, and 21340029. 102 Kamimoto, Kawai, Koike, and Takei equation with the potential Q of the form (0.2), that is, the Whittaker equation with a large parameter η, gives us a WKB-theoretic canonical form of a Schrödinger equation with one simple turning point and with one simple pole in its potential. We note that the parameter α contained in the Whittaker equation in Section 2 is an infinite series α(η) = ∑ k≥0 αkη −k (αk: a constant), and we call such an equation the ∞-Whittaker equation when we want to emphasize that α is not a genuine constant but an infinite series as above. In order to make a semiglobal study of a Schrödinger equation with one simple turning point and with a simple pole in its potential, we let the simple pole singular point merge with the turning point and observe what kind of equation appears. For example, what if we let α tend to zero in (0.2) with γ being kept intact? Interestingly enough, the resulting equation is what we call a ghost equation (see [Ko2]); we have been wondering where we should place the class of ghost equations in regard to the whole WKB analysis. A ghost equation has no turning point by its definition (cf. Remark 1.1 in Section 1); still, a WKB solution of a ghost equation displays singularity similar to that which a WKB solution normally has near a turning point. The singularity is due to the singularities contained in the coefficients of η−k (k ≥ 1) in the potential Q (see [Ko2] for details; there a ghost (point) is tentatively called a “new” turning point). In view of the above observation, we regard a Schrödinger equation with one simple turning point and with one simple pole in its potential as an equation obtained through perturbation of a ghost equation by a simple pole term aq(x,a)/x, where a is a complex parameter and q(x,a) is a holomorphic function defined on a neighborhood of (x,a) = (0,0). An equation obtained by such a procedure is called an equation with a merging pair of a simple pole and a simple turning point, or, for short, an MPPT equation. Precisely speaking, we call a Schrödinger equation (0.1) an MPPT equation if its potential Q depends also on an auxiliary parameter a and has the form (0.3) Q = Q0(x,a) x + η−1 Q1(x,a) x + η−2 Q2(x,a) x2 , where Qj(x,a) (j = 0,1,2) are holomorphic near (x,a) = (0,0) and Q0(x,a) satisfies the following conditions (0.4) and (0.5): Q0(0, a) = 0 if a = 0, (0.4) Q0(x,0) = c (0) 0 x + O(x ) holds with c 0 being (0.5) a constant different from 0. Clearly we find a ghost equation at a = 0; furthermore, the implicit function theorem together with the assumption (0.5) guarantees the existence of a unique holomorphic function x(a) that satisfies (0.6) Q0 ( x(a), a ) = 0. Assumption (0.4) entails (0.7) x(a) = 0 if a = 0, On the WKB-theoretic structure of an MPPT operator 103 and the assumption (0.5) guarantees that, for a sufficiently small a( = 0), x = x(a) is a simple turning point of the operator in question. As the term “an MPPT equation” indicates, it is a counterpart of an MTP equation in our context. An MTP equation, that is, a merging-turning-points equation introduced in [AKT4] contains, by definition, two simple turning points that merge into one double turning point as the parameter t tends to zero; whereas, in an MPPT equation, a simple pole and a simple turning point merge into a ghost point where neither zero nor singularity is observed in the highest degree (i.e., degree zero) in η part of the potential. The parallelism of these two notions is not a superficial one. The reduction of an MPPT equation to a canonical one is achieved in Sections 1 and 2 in a way parallel to that used in the reduction of MTP equation to a canonical one. First, in Section 1 we construct a WKB-theoretic transformation that brings an MPPT equation with the parameter a being zero to a particular ∞-Whittaker equation, that is, the ∞Whittaker equation with the top degree part of the parameter α(η) being zero (i.e., α(η) = ∑ k≥1 αkη −k), and then in Section 2 we construct the transformation of a generic (i.e., a = 0) MPPT equation to the ∞-Whittaker equation in the form of a perturbation series in a, starting with the transformation constructed in Section 1. In Sections 1 and 2 we focus our attention on the formal aspect of the problem, and the estimation of the growth order of the coefficients that appear in several formal series is given separately in Appendices A and B. One important implication of the estimates given in Appendix B is that they endow the formal transformation with an analytic meaning as a microdifferential operator through the Borel transformation. Furthermore, as is shown in Theorems 1.7 and 2.7, the action of the resulting microdifferential operator upon multivalued analytic functions such as Borel-transformed WKB solutions is described in terms of an integro-differential operator of particular type; its kernel function contains a differential operator of infinite order in x-variable. Thus it is of local character in x-variable, whereas it is suited for the global study related to the resurgence phenomena in y-variable (see, e.g., [SKK], [K] for the notion of a differential operator of infinite order; see also [AKT4], which first used a differential operator of infinite order in exact WKB analysis). As the domain of definition of the integrodifferential operator may be chosen to be uniform with respect to the parameter a (see Remark 2.3), our results in Section 2 are of semiglobal character, as is noted in Remark 4.1. This uniformity is one of the most important advantages in introducing the notion of an MPPT operator. It is worth emphasizing that the uniformity becomes clearly visible through the Borel transformation. In order to use the results obtained in Section 2 for the detailed study of the structure of Borel-transformed WKB solutions of an MPPT equation, we first study in Section 3 analytic properties of Borel-transformed WKB solutions of the Whittaker equation, and then in Section 4 we analyze Borel-transformed WKB solutions of the ∞-Whittaker equation using the results obtained in Section 3. The basis of the study in Section 3 is a recent result of Koike [KoT], and the analysis in Section 4 makes essential use of the estimate (B.3) of the coefficients {αk(a)}k≥0 104 Kamimoto, Kawai, Koike, and Takei of the parameter α(a, η) = ∑ k≥0 αk(a)η −k; the effect of this infinite series that appears in the ∞-Whittaker equation is grasped as a microdifferential operator acting on Borel-transformed WKB solutions of the Whittaker equation. Combining all the results obtained in Sections 2 and 4, we summarize in Section 5 basic properties of Borel-transformed WKB solutions of an MPPT equation with a = 0. 1. Construction of the transformation to the canonical form, I: The case where a = 0 The purpose of this section is to show how to construct the Borel-transformable series (1.1) x(x̃, η) = ∑ k≥0 x (0) k (x̃)η −k
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期刊介绍: Papers on pure and applied mathematics intended for publication in the Kyoto Journal of Mathematics should be written in English, French, or German. Submission of a paper acknowledges that the paper is original and is not submitted elsewhere.
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