Introduction to classical chaos and quantum chaos.
Résumé
This article gives an introduction to chaotic systems in classical mechanics and their quantum mechanical counterparts.
The author assumes very few prerequisites and starts with a basic introduction to the mathematical formulation of classical and quantum mechanics and discusses the relation between classical and quantum systems by means of the mathematical procedure of quantization. Then, the article proceeds with discussing the notion of ``chaos'' in classical mechanics and particularly focuses on the concepts of hyperbolicity, ergodicity and mixing. In the last section, the quantum mechanical properties of classically chaotic systems are discussed. Here, the focus lies in particular on quantum ergodicity and the role of Egorov's theorem. Finally, the distribution of eigenvalues, according to Weyl's law, {\it M.C. Gutzwiller}'s trace formula [``Periodic orbits and classical quantization conditions'', J. Math. Phys., 12, No. 3, 343--358 (1971; \url{doi:10.1063/1.1665596})] as well as the random matrix conjecture of {\it O. Bohigas} et al. [``Characterization of chaotic quantum spectra and universality of level fluctuation laws'', Phys. Rev. Lett. 52, No. 1, 1--4 (1984; \url{doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.52.1})] is also discussed.
A particularly nice feature throughout the whole text is that it includes both mathematically rigorous definitions which can be illustrated for toy models such as the cat map, as well as phyiscally relevant sytems such as billiards. For the latter it is then outlined, where the difficulties in a mathematically rigorous description lie.