Stein's method and approximating the quantum harmonic oscillator
From MaRDI portal
Publication:1715521
DOI10.3150/17-BEJ960zbMath1442.60102OpenAlexW2904724736WikidataQ92616881 ScholiaQ92616881MaRDI QIDQ1715521
Ian W. McKeague, Yvik Swan, Erol A. Peköz
Publication date: 28 January 2019
Published in: Bernoulli (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://projecteuclid.org/euclid.bj/1544605240
Central limit and other weak theorems (60F05) Interacting random processes; statistical mechanics type models; percolation theory (60K35) Functional limit theorems; invariance principles (60F17) Alternative quantum mechanics (including hidden variables, etc.) (81Q65)
Related Items (4)
Optimal bounds in normal approximation for many interacting worlds ⋮ Stein’s method and approximating the multidimensional quantum harmonic oscillator ⋮ On rereading Stein's lemma: its intrinsic connection with Cramér-Rao identity and some new identities ⋮ On Stein's method for multivariate self-decomposable laws
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Convergence of empirical distributions in an interpretation of quantum mechanics
- Fundamentals of Stein's method
- Stein's method for comparison of univariate distributions
- Nonnormal approximation by Stein's method of exchangeable pairs with application to the Curie-Weiss model
- Generalized gamma approximation with rates for urns, walks and trees
- Stein's method on Wiener chaos
- Stein's method of exchangeable pairs for the Beta distribution and generalizations
- Fluctuations of eigenvalues and second order Poincaré inequalities
- Characterizations of distributions by variance bounds
- Stein's method and the zero bias transformation with application to simple random sampling
- Degree asymptotics with rates for preferential attachment random graphs
- New rates for exponential approximation and the theorems of Rényi and Yaglom
- Normal Approximations with Malliavin Calculus
- Normal Approximation by Stein’s Method
- A Suggested Interpretation of the Quantum Theory in Terms of "Hidden" Variables. I
This page was built for publication: Stein's method and approximating the quantum harmonic oscillator