Date:
Wed, 10/07/202412:00-13:30
Location:
Danciger B Building, Seminar room
Lecturer: Prof. David Tannor - WIS
Abstract:
This talk has three parts. The first part is an introduction to Hamilton’s two monumental
papers from 1834-1835, which introduced the Hamilton-Jacobi equation, Hamilton’s
equations of motion and the principle of least action [1]. These three formulations of
classical mechanics became the three forerunners of quantum mechanics; but ironically
none of them is what Hamilton was looking for -- he was looking for a “magical”
function, the principal function SS(qq1, qq2,tt) from which the entire trajectory history can
be obtained just by differentiation (no integration) [2]. In the second part of the talk I
argue that Hamilton’s principal function is almost certainly more magical than even
Hamilton realized. Astonishingly, all of the above formulations of classical mechanics
can be derived just from assuming that SS(qq1, qq2,tt) is additive, with no input of physics
[3]. The third part of the talk will present a new formulation of quantum mechanics in
which the Hamilton-Jacobi equation is extended to complex-valued trajectories [4],
allowing the treatment of classically allowed processes, classically forbidden process
and arbitrary time-dependent external fields within a single, coherent framework. The
approach is illustrated for barrier tunneling, wavepacket revivals, nonadiabatic
dynamics, optical excitation using shaped laser pulses and high harmonic generation
with strong field attosecond pulses [5].
1. W. R. Hamilton, On a General Method in Dynamics, Philosophical Transactions, Part 2, p. 247 (1834);
ibid., Second Essay on a General Method in Dynamics, Part 1, p. 95 (1835).
2. M. Nakane and C. G. Fraser, The Early History of Hamilton-Jacobi Dynamics 1834-1837, Centaurus 44,
161 (2002); C. Lanczos, The Variational Principles of Mechanics (Oxford, 1949)
3. D. J. Tannor, New derivation of Hamilton’s three formulations of classical mechanics (preprint); ibid,
Duality of the Principle of Least Action: A New Formulation of Classical Mechanics, arXiv:2109.09094
(2021).
4. Y. Goldfarb, I. Degani and D. J. Tannor, Bohmian mechanics with complex action: A new trajectory
based formulation of quantum mechanics, J. Chem. Phys. 125, 231103 (2006); J. Schiff, Y. Goldfarb and D.
J. Tannor, Path integral derivations of complex trajectory methods, Phys. Rev. A 83, 012104 (2011); N.
Zamstein and D. J. Tannor, Overcoming the root search problem in complex quantum trajectory
calculations, J. Chem. Phys. 140, 041105(2014).
5. N. Zamstein and D. J. Tannor, Non-adiabatic molecular dynamics with complex quantum trajectories. I.
The adiabatic representation, J. Chem. Phys. 137, 22A518 (2012); W. Koch and D. J. Tannor, Wavepacket
revivals via complex trajectory propagation, Chem. Phys. Lett. 683, 306 (2017); W. Koch and D. J. Tannor,
A three-step model of high harmonic generation using complex classical trajectories, Annals of Physics,
427, 168288 (2021).
Abstract:
This talk has three parts. The first part is an introduction to Hamilton’s two monumental
papers from 1834-1835, which introduced the Hamilton-Jacobi equation, Hamilton’s
equations of motion and the principle of least action [1]. These three formulations of
classical mechanics became the three forerunners of quantum mechanics; but ironically
none of them is what Hamilton was looking for -- he was looking for a “magical”
function, the principal function SS(qq1, qq2,tt) from which the entire trajectory history can
be obtained just by differentiation (no integration) [2]. In the second part of the talk I
argue that Hamilton’s principal function is almost certainly more magical than even
Hamilton realized. Astonishingly, all of the above formulations of classical mechanics
can be derived just from assuming that SS(qq1, qq2,tt) is additive, with no input of physics
[3]. The third part of the talk will present a new formulation of quantum mechanics in
which the Hamilton-Jacobi equation is extended to complex-valued trajectories [4],
allowing the treatment of classically allowed processes, classically forbidden process
and arbitrary time-dependent external fields within a single, coherent framework. The
approach is illustrated for barrier tunneling, wavepacket revivals, nonadiabatic
dynamics, optical excitation using shaped laser pulses and high harmonic generation
with strong field attosecond pulses [5].
1. W. R. Hamilton, On a General Method in Dynamics, Philosophical Transactions, Part 2, p. 247 (1834);
ibid., Second Essay on a General Method in Dynamics, Part 1, p. 95 (1835).
2. M. Nakane and C. G. Fraser, The Early History of Hamilton-Jacobi Dynamics 1834-1837, Centaurus 44,
161 (2002); C. Lanczos, The Variational Principles of Mechanics (Oxford, 1949)
3. D. J. Tannor, New derivation of Hamilton’s three formulations of classical mechanics (preprint); ibid,
Duality of the Principle of Least Action: A New Formulation of Classical Mechanics, arXiv:2109.09094
(2021).
4. Y. Goldfarb, I. Degani and D. J. Tannor, Bohmian mechanics with complex action: A new trajectory
based formulation of quantum mechanics, J. Chem. Phys. 125, 231103 (2006); J. Schiff, Y. Goldfarb and D.
J. Tannor, Path integral derivations of complex trajectory methods, Phys. Rev. A 83, 012104 (2011); N.
Zamstein and D. J. Tannor, Overcoming the root search problem in complex quantum trajectory
calculations, J. Chem. Phys. 140, 041105(2014).
5. N. Zamstein and D. J. Tannor, Non-adiabatic molecular dynamics with complex quantum trajectories. I.
The adiabatic representation, J. Chem. Phys. 137, 22A518 (2012); W. Koch and D. J. Tannor, Wavepacket
revivals via complex trajectory propagation, Chem. Phys. Lett. 683, 306 (2017); W. Koch and D. J. Tannor,
A three-step model of high harmonic generation using complex classical trajectories, Annals of Physics,
427, 168288 (2021).