We demonstrate that in Hamiltonian many-body systems at equilibrium, any kind of time dependent correlation function c(t) can always be expanded in a series of (complex) exponential functions of time when its Laplace transform C(z) has single poles. The characteristic frequencies can be identified as the eigenfrequencies of the correlation. This is done without introducing the concepts of fluctuating forces and memory functions, due to Mori and Zwanzig and extensively used in the literature in the last decades. Our method is based on a different projection technique in the Hilbert space S of the system and shows that appropriate approximations of the exponential series are related to the contraction of S to a finite, usually small, number of dimensions. The time dependence of correlation functions is always described in detail by a multiple-exponential functionality also at long times. This result is therefore also valid for correlation functions of many-body Hamiltonian systems for which a power-law dependence, observed in restricted time ranges and predicted to be the asymptotic one, can be considered at most as a useful approximate modeling of long-time behavior.
Exponential series expansion for correlation functions of many-body systems
Ubaldo Bafile
2014
Abstract
We demonstrate that in Hamiltonian many-body systems at equilibrium, any kind of time dependent correlation function c(t) can always be expanded in a series of (complex) exponential functions of time when its Laplace transform C(z) has single poles. The characteristic frequencies can be identified as the eigenfrequencies of the correlation. This is done without introducing the concepts of fluctuating forces and memory functions, due to Mori and Zwanzig and extensively used in the literature in the last decades. Our method is based on a different projection technique in the Hilbert space S of the system and shows that appropriate approximations of the exponential series are related to the contraction of S to a finite, usually small, number of dimensions. The time dependence of correlation functions is always described in detail by a multiple-exponential functionality also at long times. This result is therefore also valid for correlation functions of many-body Hamiltonian systems for which a power-law dependence, observed in restricted time ranges and predicted to be the asymptotic one, can be considered at most as a useful approximate modeling of long-time behavior.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.


