Let $A = \{ \alpha \in \mathbb{R}^2 : \frac{1}{2}|k| \leqslant |\alpha| \leqslant 2|k| \}$, where $k \in \mathbb{R}^2$ is non-zero, and $|\cdot|$ denotes the Euclidean norm on $\mathbb{R}^2$. I am trying to either compute or bound the follow integral in terms of $|k|$:
$$\displaystyle \int_{A} |\alpha|^{-3/2}|k-\alpha|^{-3/2} \ \mathrm{d}\alpha$$
What I would like to obtain is something that is $O(|k|^{-1 - \epsilon})$, for some $\epsilon > 0$. However, I can't manage to obtain a bound like this. The best I am able to manage is $O(|k|^{-1})$. If we notice that on $A$, the norm $|k - \alpha|$ varies from $0$ to $3|k|$, and using $|\alpha|^{-3/2} \leqslant C|k|^{-3/2}$, the integral becomes
$$\displaystyle C|k|^{-3/2} \int_{0}^{3|k|} \int_{|k - \alpha| = r}|k - \alpha|^{-3/2} \ \mathrm{d}S \ \mathrm{d}r = C|k|^{-3/2}\int_{0}^{3|k|}r\cdot r^{-3/2} \ \mathrm{d}r = O(|k|^{-1}),$$
and this estimate is not what I want. Can anyone manage to get a better estimate of the form $O(|k|^{-1 - \epsilon})$?