Quantum-classical correspondence for local density of states and eigenfunctions of a chaotic periodic billiard
From MaRDI portal
Publication:1580614
DOI10.1016/S0375-9601(00)00546-6zbMath1064.81509arXivnlin/0002044OpenAlexW2016071545MaRDI QIDQ1580614
G. A. Luna-Acosta, J. A. Méndez-Bermúdez, Felix M. Izrailev
Publication date: 26 September 2000
Published in: Physics Letters. A (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://arxiv.org/abs/nlin/0002044
eigenfunctionsquantum-classical correspondencelocal density of stateslocalized states2D-rippled billiardchaotic periodic billiardconservative chaotic Hamiltoniansglobal chaos regimesparsed states
Related Items
On the Emergence of the Microcanonical Description from a Pure State, Scaling invariance for the escape of particles from a periodically corrugated waveguide, Manifestation of classical instability in the quantum density of states of a double well potential, Quantum chaos and thermalization in isolated systems of interacting particles, Solution of the eigenvalue problem for two-dimensional modulated billiards using a coordinate transformation, A family of dissipative two-dimensional mappings: chaotic, regular and steady state dynamics investigation, Classical counterpart of wave functions for two-dimensional open waveguides, Phase transition in dynamical systems: defining classes of universality for two-dimensional Hamiltonian mappings via critical exponents
Cites Work
- Quantum signatures of chaos. With a foreword by H. Haken
- Regular and chaotic dynamics.
- Quantum ergodicity and localization in conservative systems: the Wigner band random matrix model.
- Semiclassical properties of eigenfunctions and occupation number distribution for a model of two interacting particles
- Spectral properties of systems with dynamical localization. I. The local spectrum
- Spectral properties of systems with dynamical localization. II. Finite sample approach
- Characterization of Chaotic Quantum Spectra and Universality of Level Fluctuation Laws
- Dynamical Theory in Curved Spaces. I. A Review of the Classical and Quantum Action Principles