Schrödinger Equations and Diffusion Theory [electronic resource] /

Schrödinger Equations and Diffusion Theory addresses the question “What is the Schrödinger equation?” in terms of diffusion processes, and shows that the Schrödinger equation and diffusion equations in duality are equivalent. In turn, Schrödinger’s conjecture of 1931 is solved. The theory of diffusion processes for the Schrödinger equation tells us that we must go further into the theory of systems of (infinitely) many interacting quantum (diffusion) particles. The method of relative entropy and the theory of transformations enable us to construct severely singular diffusion processes which appear to be equivalent to Schrödinger equations. The theory of large deviations and the propagation of chaos of interacting diffusion particles reveal the statistical mechanical nature of the Schrödinger equation, namely, quantum mechanics. The text is practically self-contained and requires only an elementary knowledge of probability theory at the graduate level. --- This book is a self-contained, very well-organized monograph recommended to researchers and graduate students in the field of probability theory, functional analysis and quantum dynamics. (...) what is written in this book may be regarded as an introduction to the theory of diffusion processes and applications written with the physicists in mind. Interesting topics present themselves as the chapters proceed. (...) this book is an excellent addition to the literature of mathematical sciences with a flavour different from an ordinary textbook in probability theory because of the author’s great contributions in this direction. Readers will certainly enjoy the topics and appreciate the  profound mathematical properties of diffusion processes. (Mathematical Reviews).

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Main Authors: Nagasawa, Masao. author., SpringerLink (Online service)
Format: Texto biblioteca
Language:eng
Published: Basel : Springer Basel : Imprint: Birkhäuser, 1993
Subjects:Mathematics., Partial differential equations., Probabilities., Mathematical physics., Probability Theory and Stochastic Processes., Partial Differential Equations., Mathematical Physics.,
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-0348-0560-5
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institution COLPOS
collection Koha
country México
countrycode MX
component Bibliográfico
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databasecode cat-colpos
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Departamento de documentación y biblioteca de COLPOS
language eng
topic Mathematics.
Partial differential equations.
Probabilities.
Mathematical physics.
Mathematics.
Probability Theory and Stochastic Processes.
Partial Differential Equations.
Mathematical Physics.
Mathematics.
Partial differential equations.
Probabilities.
Mathematical physics.
Mathematics.
Probability Theory and Stochastic Processes.
Partial Differential Equations.
Mathematical Physics.
spellingShingle Mathematics.
Partial differential equations.
Probabilities.
Mathematical physics.
Mathematics.
Probability Theory and Stochastic Processes.
Partial Differential Equations.
Mathematical Physics.
Mathematics.
Partial differential equations.
Probabilities.
Mathematical physics.
Mathematics.
Probability Theory and Stochastic Processes.
Partial Differential Equations.
Mathematical Physics.
Nagasawa, Masao. author.
SpringerLink (Online service)
Schrödinger Equations and Diffusion Theory [electronic resource] /
description Schrödinger Equations and Diffusion Theory addresses the question “What is the Schrödinger equation?” in terms of diffusion processes, and shows that the Schrödinger equation and diffusion equations in duality are equivalent. In turn, Schrödinger’s conjecture of 1931 is solved. The theory of diffusion processes for the Schrödinger equation tells us that we must go further into the theory of systems of (infinitely) many interacting quantum (diffusion) particles. The method of relative entropy and the theory of transformations enable us to construct severely singular diffusion processes which appear to be equivalent to Schrödinger equations. The theory of large deviations and the propagation of chaos of interacting diffusion particles reveal the statistical mechanical nature of the Schrödinger equation, namely, quantum mechanics. The text is practically self-contained and requires only an elementary knowledge of probability theory at the graduate level. --- This book is a self-contained, very well-organized monograph recommended to researchers and graduate students in the field of probability theory, functional analysis and quantum dynamics. (...) what is written in this book may be regarded as an introduction to the theory of diffusion processes and applications written with the physicists in mind. Interesting topics present themselves as the chapters proceed. (...) this book is an excellent addition to the literature of mathematical sciences with a flavour different from an ordinary textbook in probability theory because of the author’s great contributions in this direction. Readers will certainly enjoy the topics and appreciate the  profound mathematical properties of diffusion processes. (Mathematical Reviews).
format Texto
topic_facet Mathematics.
Partial differential equations.
Probabilities.
Mathematical physics.
Mathematics.
Probability Theory and Stochastic Processes.
Partial Differential Equations.
Mathematical Physics.
author Nagasawa, Masao. author.
SpringerLink (Online service)
author_facet Nagasawa, Masao. author.
SpringerLink (Online service)
author_sort Nagasawa, Masao. author.
title Schrödinger Equations and Diffusion Theory [electronic resource] /
title_short Schrödinger Equations and Diffusion Theory [electronic resource] /
title_full Schrödinger Equations and Diffusion Theory [electronic resource] /
title_fullStr Schrödinger Equations and Diffusion Theory [electronic resource] /
title_full_unstemmed Schrödinger Equations and Diffusion Theory [electronic resource] /
title_sort schrödinger equations and diffusion theory [electronic resource] /
publisher Basel : Springer Basel : Imprint: Birkhäuser,
publishDate 1993
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-0348-0560-5
work_keys_str_mv AT nagasawamasaoauthor schrodingerequationsanddiffusiontheoryelectronicresource
AT springerlinkonlineservice schrodingerequationsanddiffusiontheoryelectronicresource
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spelling KOHA-OAI-TEST:1746782018-07-30T22:52:28ZSchrödinger Equations and Diffusion Theory [electronic resource] / Nagasawa, Masao. author. SpringerLink (Online service) textBasel : Springer Basel : Imprint: Birkhäuser,1993.engSchrödinger Equations and Diffusion Theory addresses the question “What is the Schrödinger equation?” in terms of diffusion processes, and shows that the Schrödinger equation and diffusion equations in duality are equivalent. In turn, Schrödinger’s conjecture of 1931 is solved. The theory of diffusion processes for the Schrödinger equation tells us that we must go further into the theory of systems of (infinitely) many interacting quantum (diffusion) particles. The method of relative entropy and the theory of transformations enable us to construct severely singular diffusion processes which appear to be equivalent to Schrödinger equations. The theory of large deviations and the propagation of chaos of interacting diffusion particles reveal the statistical mechanical nature of the Schrödinger equation, namely, quantum mechanics. The text is practically self-contained and requires only an elementary knowledge of probability theory at the graduate level. --- This book is a self-contained, very well-organized monograph recommended to researchers and graduate students in the field of probability theory, functional analysis and quantum dynamics. (...) what is written in this book may be regarded as an introduction to the theory of diffusion processes and applications written with the physicists in mind. Interesting topics present themselves as the chapters proceed. (...) this book is an excellent addition to the literature of mathematical sciences with a flavour different from an ordinary textbook in probability theory because of the author’s great contributions in this direction. Readers will certainly enjoy the topics and appreciate the  profound mathematical properties of diffusion processes. (Mathematical Reviews).Preface -- I Introduction and Motivation -- II Diffusion Processes and their Transformations -- III Duality and Time Reversal of Diffusion Processes -- IV Equivalence of Diffusion and Schrödinger Equations -- V Variational Principle -- VI Diffusion Processes in q-Representation -- VII Segregation of a Population -- VIII The Schrödinger Equation can be a Boltzmann Equation -- IX Applications of the Statistical Model for Schrödinger Equations -- X Relative Entropy and Csiszar’s Projection -- XI Large Deviations -- XII Non-Linearity Induced by the Branching Property -- Appendix -- References -- Index.Schrödinger Equations and Diffusion Theory addresses the question “What is the Schrödinger equation?” in terms of diffusion processes, and shows that the Schrödinger equation and diffusion equations in duality are equivalent. In turn, Schrödinger’s conjecture of 1931 is solved. The theory of diffusion processes for the Schrödinger equation tells us that we must go further into the theory of systems of (infinitely) many interacting quantum (diffusion) particles. The method of relative entropy and the theory of transformations enable us to construct severely singular diffusion processes which appear to be equivalent to Schrödinger equations. The theory of large deviations and the propagation of chaos of interacting diffusion particles reveal the statistical mechanical nature of the Schrödinger equation, namely, quantum mechanics. The text is practically self-contained and requires only an elementary knowledge of probability theory at the graduate level. --- This book is a self-contained, very well-organized monograph recommended to researchers and graduate students in the field of probability theory, functional analysis and quantum dynamics. (...) what is written in this book may be regarded as an introduction to the theory of diffusion processes and applications written with the physicists in mind. Interesting topics present themselves as the chapters proceed. (...) this book is an excellent addition to the literature of mathematical sciences with a flavour different from an ordinary textbook in probability theory because of the author’s great contributions in this direction. Readers will certainly enjoy the topics and appreciate the  profound mathematical properties of diffusion processes. (Mathematical Reviews).Mathematics.Partial differential equations.Probabilities.Mathematical physics.Mathematics.Probability Theory and Stochastic Processes.Partial Differential Equations.Mathematical Physics.Springer eBookshttp://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-0348-0560-5URN:ISBN:9783034805605