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Phase-space centroid density, defined

In the early papers [4,8], the development of the CMD method was guided in part by the effective harmonic analysis and, in part, by physical reasoning. In Paper III, however, a mathematical justification of CMD was provided. In the latter analysis, it was shown that (1) CMD always yields a mathematically well-defined approximation to the quantum Kubo-transformed position or velocity correlation function, and (2) the equilibrium path centroid variable occupies an important role in the time correlation function because of the nature of the preaveraging procedure in CMD. Critical to the analysis of CMD and its justification was the phase-space centroid density formulation of Paper III, so that the momentum could be treated as an independent dynamical variable. The relationship between the centroid correlation function and the Kubo-transformed position correlation function was found to be unique if the centroid is taken as a dynamical variable. The analysis of Paper III will now be reviewed. For notational simplicity, the equations are restricted to a two-dimensional phase space, but they can readily be generalized. [Pg.169]

For an arbitrary canonical density operator, the phase space centroid distribution fimction is imiquely defined. However, this function does not directly contain any dynamical information from the quantum ensemble because such information has been lost in the course of the trace operation. The lost information may be recovered by associating to each value of the centroid distribution function the following normalized operator ... [Pg.52]


See other pages where Phase-space centroid density, defined is mentioned: [Pg.179]    [Pg.179]    [Pg.157]    [Pg.157]    [Pg.139]    [Pg.274]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.157 , Pg.158 , Pg.159 ]




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