Quantization is geometry, after all (Q1105216)

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Quantization is geometry, after all
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    Quantization is geometry, after all (English)
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    1988
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    Quantization of a general canonically formulated classical theory is expressed in a geometric fashion utilizing the symplectic structure of phase space augmented by one of several acceptable Riemannian metric structures appended to the phase-space manifold. The purpose of the metric is to provide an adequate geometrical structure on phase space to support Brownian motion which is used in a path-integral-like quantization procedure. For a wide class of Hamiltonian the propagator of the quantum theory is given a rigorous, unambiguous, and completely geometric interpretation that is covariant under arbitrary canonical coordinate transformations. In this procedure different appended Riemannian geometries result in a quantization involving completely inequivalent sets of quantum kinematical variables. In particular, for Heisenberg variables this quantization procedure provides a natural geometric explanation of why the usual Schrödinger representation applies to only a very limited set of canonical coordinates and not to all such coordinates.
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    symplectic structure
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    phase space
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    Brownian motion
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    path-integral-like quantization procedure
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    appended Riemannian geometries
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