Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
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Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. · Aug 1997
Kinematic geometry of mass-triangles and reduction of Schrödinger's equation of three-body systems to partial differential equations solely defined on triangular parameters.
Schrödinger's equation of a three-body system is a linear partial differential equation (PDE) defined on the 9-dimensional configuration space, R9, naturally equipped with Jacobi's kinematic metric and with translational and rotational symmetries. The natural invariance of Schrödinger's equation with respect to the translational symmetry enables us to reduce the configuration space to that of a 6-dimensional one, while that of the rotational symmetry provides the quantum mechanical version of angular momentum conservation. However, the problem of maximizing the use of rotational invariance so as to enable us to reduce Schrödinger's equation to corresponding PDEs solely defined on triangular parameters--i.e., at the level of R6/SO(3)--has never been adequately treated. This article describes the results on the orbital geometry and the harmonic analysis of (SO(3),R6) which enable us to obtain such a reduction of Schrödinger's equation of three-body systems to PDEs solely defined on triangular parameters.