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Comparison of Matsubara dynamics with exact quantum dynamics for an oscillator coupled to a dissipative bath

Authors :
Prada, Adam
Pós, Eszter S
Althorpe, Stuart C
Prada, Adam [0000-0003-3601-1265]
Althorpe, Stuart C [0000-0003-1288-8070]
Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
Source :
The Journal of Chemical Physics. 158:114106
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
AIP Publishing, 2023.

Abstract

Matsubara dynamics is the classical dynamics which results when imaginary-time path-integrals are smoothed; it conserves the quantum Boltzmann distribution and appears in drastically approximated form in path-integral dynamics methods such as (thermostatted) ring-polymer molecular dynamics (T)RPMD and centroid molecular dynamics (CMD). However, it has never been compared directly with exact quantum dynamics for non-linear operators, because the difficulty of treating the phase has limited the number of Matsubara modes to fewer than 10. Here, we treat up to $\sim$200 Matsubara modes in simulations of a Morse oscillator coupled to a dissipative bath of harmonic oscillators. This is done by expressing the Matsubara equations of motion in the form of a generalised Langevin equation, approximating the noise to be real, and analytically continuing the momenta to convert the Matsubara phase into ring-polymer springs. The resulting equations of motion are stable up to a maximum value of modes which increases with bath coupling strength and decreases with system anharmonicity. The dynamics of the tail of highly oscillatory Matsubara modes is found to be harmonic, and can thus be computed efficiently. For a moderately anharmonic oscillator with a strong but subcritical coupling to the bath, the Matsubara simulations yield non-linear $\large\langle{\hat q^2\hat q^2(t)}\large\rangle$ time-correlation functions in almost perfect agreement with the exact quantum results. Reasonable agreement is also obtained for weaker coupling strengths, where errors arise because of the real-noise approximation. These results give strong evidence that Matsubara dynamics correctly explains how classical dynamics arises in quantum systems which are in thermal equilibrium.

Details

ISSN :
10897690 and 00219606
Volume :
158
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of Chemical Physics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1f97f0e890d7f002e6dd247bc4156011
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1063/5.0138250