Course Identification

Advanced Topics in Classical Mechanics (interdisciplinary)
20242351

Lecturers and Teaching Assistants

Prof. David Tannor
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Course Schedule and Location

2024
First Semester
Tuesday, 14:00 - 16:00, Science Teaching Lab 1
12/12/2023
27/02/2024

Field of Study, Course Type and Credit Points

Chemical Sciences: Seminar; Elective; Regular; 2.00 points
Physical Sciences: 2.00 points

Comments

This course will be held by hybrid learning.

Prerequisites

No

Restrictions

No

Language of Instruction

English

Attendance and participation

Required in at least 80% of the lectures

Grade Type

Pass / Fail

Grade Breakdown (in %)

100%

Evaluation Type

Seminar

Scheduled date 1

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-
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Estimated Weekly Independent Workload (in hours)

N/A

Syllabus

This is a seminar course on advanced topics in classical and semiclassical mechanics. The course will meet once a week for 2 hours.  The format of the course will be approximately 50% frontal lectures by the instructor and 50% seminars by the students on topics that are part of the syllabus.

I. Classical Mechanics

                A. The Lagrangian and the action

                B. Canonical transformations

                C. Time evolution in phase space

                D. Classical resonance theory

                E. Periodic orbits

                F. Geometrical approach to classical mechanics

II. Semiclassical Mechanics

                A. Feynman path integration

                B. The semiclassical propagator (van Vleck-Gutzwiller propagator)

                C. Gutzwiller trace formula

                D. Phase space representations of wavefunctions and densities

                E. The semiclassical coherent state propagator

                F. Initial value representations and Gaussian wavepacket methods

                G. WKB methods

Learning Outcomes

The student will learn a variety of advanced topics in classical mechanics and then how these reformulations of classical mechanics lead to quantum mechanics and semiclassical approximations.

Reading List

The primary text will be The Semiclassical Way by Heller. Additional texts: Gutzwiller, Chaos in Classical and Quantum Mechanics; Arnold, Geometrical Methods in Classical Mechanics; Miller, Classical S-matrix Theory.

 

Website

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