Topology of Classical Molecular Optimal Control Landscapes in Phase Space
Carlee Joe-Wong, Tak-San Ho, Ruixing Long, Herschel Rabitz, Rebing Wu

TL;DR
This paper analyzes the topology of classical control landscapes in molecular dynamics, demonstrating they are trap-free and robust, which explains the success of control experiments across classical and quantum regimes.
Contribution
It provides a theoretical analysis showing classical control landscapes are free of traps and robust, supported by extensive numerical simulations across various molecular models.
Findings
Classical control landscapes are trap-free under certain conditions.
Optimal control Hessian has finite rank, indicating robustness.
Numerical simulations confirm the absence of traps in diverse systems.
Abstract
Optimal control of molecular dynamics is commonly expressed from a quantum mechanical perspective. However, in most contexts the preponderance of molecular dynamics studies utilize classical mechanical models. This paper treats laser-driven optimal control of molecular dynamics in a classical framework. We consider the objective of steering a molecular system from an initial point in phase space to a target point, subject to the dynamic constraint of Hamilton's equations. The classical control landscape corresponding to this objective is a functional of the control field, and the topology of the landscape is analyzed through its gradient and Hessian with respect to the control. Under specific assumptions on the regularity of the control fields, the classical control landscape is found to be free of traps that could hinder reaching the objective. The Hessian associated with an optimal…
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Taxonomy
TopicsLaser-Matter Interactions and Applications · Spectroscopy and Quantum Chemical Studies · Advanced Chemical Physics Studies
