Quantum Theory of Reactive Scattering in Phase Space
Arseni Goussev, Roman Schubert, Holger Waalkens, Stephen Wiggins

TL;DR
This paper reviews recent advances in quantum reactive scattering using phase space and normal form theories, highlighting the role of NHIMs and providing new methods to compute reaction probabilities without classical trajectories.
Contribution
It introduces a quantum normal form approach to reactive scattering, linking phase space structures to quantum states and reaction probabilities, and applies it to specific molecular systems.
Findings
Quantum normal form provides a local S-matrix near the saddle point.
CRP can be computed without classical trajectories.
Quantum states on NHIMs relate to Gamov-Siegert resonances.
Abstract
We review recent results on quantum reactive scattering from a phase space perspective. The approach uses classical and quantum versions of normal form theory and the perspective of dynamical systems theory. Over the past ten years the classical normal form theory has provided a method for realizing the phase space structures that are responsible for determining reactions in high dimensional Hamiltonian systems. This has led to the understanding that a new (to reaction dynamics) type of phase space structure, a {\em normally hyperbolic invariant manifold} (or, NHIM) is the "anchor" on which the phase space structures governing reaction dynamics are built. The quantum normal form theory provides a method for quantizing these phase space structures through the use of the Weyl quantization procedure. We show that this approach provides a solution of the time-independent Schr\"odinger…
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