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Coherent states mechanisms

The first case has already been considered section 2.0 the second case leads to a strong classical spin-orbit coupling, which is reflected in a Hamiltonian nature of the classical combined dynamics. In both situations the procedure is to find a suitable approximate Hamiltonian Hq( ) that propagates coherent states exactly along appropriate classical spin-orbit trajectories (x(l,),p(t),n(l,)). (For problems with only translational degrees of freedom this has been suggested in (Heller, 1975) and proven in (Combescure and Robert, 1997).) Then one treats the full Hamiltonian as a perturbation of the approximate one and calculates the full time evolution in quantum mechanical perturbation theory (via the Dyson series), i.e., one iterates the Duhamel formula... [Pg.105]

The TFD formalism permits the discussion of several aspects in quantum mechanics, as for example, the thermal coherent states of an oscillator. [Pg.219]

Second, the mapping approach to nonadiabatic quantum dynamics is reviewed in Sections VI-VII. Based on an exact quantum-mechanical formulation, this approach allows us in several aspects to go beyond the scope of standard mixed quantum-classical methods. In particular, we study the classical phase space of a nonadiabatic system (including the discussion of vibronic periodic orbits) and the semiclassical description of nonadiabatic quantum mechanics via initial-value representations of the semiclassical propagator. The semiclassical spin-coherent state method and its close relation to the mapping approach is discussed in Section IX. Section X summarizes our results and concludes with some general remarks. [Pg.250]

B. A. Hess The reason that macroscopic motions display coherence is that they are in most cases at the classical limit of quantum dynamics. In this case, a suitable occupation of quantum states ensures that quantum mechanical expectation values equal the classical value of an observable. In particular, the classical state of an electromagnetic field (the coherent state) is one in which the expectation value of the operator of the electromagnetic field equals the classical field strengths. [Pg.94]

It is possible to perform more precise calculations that simultaneously account for the coherent quantum mechanical spin-state mixing and the diffusional motion of the RP. These employ the stochastic Liouville equation. Here, the spin density matrix of the RP is transformed into Liouville space and acted on by a Liouville operator (the commutator of the spin Hamiltonian and density matrix), which is then modified by a stochastic superoperator, to account for the random diffusive motion. Application to a RP and inclusion of terms for chemical reaction, W, and relaxation, R, generates the equation in the form that typically employed... [Pg.174]

The END theory was proposed in 1988 [11] as a general approach to deal with time-dependent non-adiabatic processes in quantum chemistry. We have applied the END method to the study of time-dependent processes in energy loss [12-16]. The END method takes advantage of a coherent state representation of the molecular wave function. A quantum mechanical Lagrangian formulation is employed to approximate the Schrodinger equation, via the time-dependent variational principle, by a set of coupled first-order differential equations in time to describe the END. [Pg.101]

One particular approach to classical-quantum correspondence deals with the behavior of coherent states as h approaches zero. It is interesting to note that this approach then deals with states which are, for all h, physically acceptable in both quantum and classical mechanics. [Pg.438]

Aheady the notion of continuity of the labels rules out as coherent states some familiar sets of states used in quantum mechanics. For instance, a set of discrete orthogonal states, such as a set of orthonormal basis functions ) cannot be coherent states. [Pg.21]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.477 , Pg.478 , Pg.479 , Pg.480 , Pg.481 , Pg.482 , Pg.483 , Pg.484 ]




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