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Rayleigh-Ritz Variational Method in The Complex Plane

M. W. AlMasri

Abstract

We present a systematic study of the Rayleigh--Ritz variational method for quantum oscillators in the Segal--Bargmann space. We rigorously derive the normalizability condition $|α| < \tfrac{1}{2}$ for generalized Gaussian trial functions $ψ(z) = e^{αz^2 + βz}$ through convergence analysis of Gaussian integrals in the complex plane. Applications to the harmonic oscillator demonstrate exact recovery of the ground state in Segal--Bargmann space when the trial family contains the true solution. For the quartic anharmonic oscillator ($\hat{H} = -\tfrac{1}{2}\partial_x^2 + \tfrac{1}{2}x^2 + λx^4$), adaptive Gaussian ansätze in position space yield a cubic stationarity equation and perturbative energy expansions beyond first order, capturing anharmonic wavefunction narrowing. In contrast, monomial trial functions ($ψ_n(z) = z^n$) in the Segal--Bargmann space -- while providing rigorous upper bounds $E_n = n + \tfrac{1}{2} + \tfrac{3λ}{4}(2n^2 + 2n + 1)$ for excited states -- lack width adaptability and are limited to first-order accuracy for ground-state calculations. We further analyze displaced Gaussians and displaced monomials for asymmetric potentials (e.g., $x^3 + x^4$), showing that displacement parameters are essential to capture parity breaking and stabilization effects ($E_0 \approx \tfrac{1}{2} + \tfrac{3μ}{4} - \tfrac{9λ^2}{4} + \cdots$).

Rayleigh-Ritz Variational Method in The Complex Plane

Abstract

We present a systematic study of the Rayleigh--Ritz variational method for quantum oscillators in the Segal--Bargmann space. We rigorously derive the normalizability condition for generalized Gaussian trial functions through convergence analysis of Gaussian integrals in the complex plane. Applications to the harmonic oscillator demonstrate exact recovery of the ground state in Segal--Bargmann space when the trial family contains the true solution. For the quartic anharmonic oscillator (), adaptive Gaussian ansätze in position space yield a cubic stationarity equation and perturbative energy expansions beyond first order, capturing anharmonic wavefunction narrowing. In contrast, monomial trial functions () in the Segal--Bargmann space -- while providing rigorous upper bounds for excited states -- lack width adaptability and are limited to first-order accuracy for ground-state calculations. We further analyze displaced Gaussians and displaced monomials for asymmetric potentials (e.g., ), showing that displacement parameters are essential to capture parity breaking and stabilization effects ().
Paper Structure (22 sections, 88 equations)