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arxiv: 2605.17586 · v1 · pith:XMM5I6GJnew · submitted 2026-05-17 · ✦ hep-th · gr-qc· math-ph· math.MP

Semi-classical Imprint of Horizon Induced Instability

Pith reviewed 2026-05-19 22:20 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification ✦ hep-th gr-qcmath-phmath.MP
keywords inverted harmonic oscillatordensity of statesstationary phase approximationLyapunov instabilitythermalizationhorizon instabilitysemi-classical analysisSchwartz kernel
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The pith

The density of states of an inverted harmonic oscillator on the circle, computed via stationary phase on its evolution kernel, shows thermalization as the semi-classical signature of classical Lyapunov instability.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

The paper models horizon-induced instability using an inverted harmonic oscillator whose states live in the space of square-integrable functions on the circle. It computes the density of states by applying the stationary phase approximation to an oscillatory integral representation of the Schwartz kernel for the time-evolution operator. This establishes thermalization as a semi-classical manifestation of the classical Lyapunov instability, replacing earlier heuristic analytic continuation methods. A sympathetic reader would care because it supplies a controlled approximation that bridges classical chaos near horizons with observable thermal spectra.

Core claim

By computing the density of states of the inverted harmonic oscillator in L2(S) employing the stationary phase approximation on an oscillatory integral representation of the Schwartz kernel of the time-evolution operator, the analysis demonstrates thermalisation as a semi-classical manifestation of the classical Lyapunov instability previously obtained via heuristic analytic continuation, while the spectral analysis of the Hamiltonian closes conceptual and mathematical gaps in the preceding literature.

What carries the argument

The oscillatory integral representation of the Schwartz kernel of the time-evolution operator for the inverted harmonic oscillator in L2(S), to which the stationary phase approximation is applied to obtain the density of states.

If this is right

  • Thermalization follows directly from the classical Lyapunov instability once the semi-classical limit is taken on the evolution kernel.
  • The density of states acquires a thermal profile as a direct consequence of the instability encoded in the oscillator Hamiltonian.
  • Spectral analysis supplies a consistent picture that removes the need for uncontrolled analytic continuation.
  • The same machinery applies to other systems whose classical dynamics exhibit similar exponential instabilities.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

These are editorial extensions of the paper, not claims the author makes directly.

  • The approach could be tested numerically by solving the Schrödinger equation for the circle oscillator and comparing the resulting spectrum to the stationary-phase prediction.
  • Analog gravity setups that realize inverted-oscillator-like instabilities might exhibit measurable thermal signatures in their density of states.
  • The method suggests a route to computing thermal spectra for more general horizon geometries by identifying suitable unstable oscillators.

Load-bearing premise

The inverted harmonic oscillator on the circle faithfully captures the essential features of horizon-induced classical instability.

What would settle it

An exact calculation of the density of states for the inverted harmonic oscillator in L2(S), performed without the stationary phase approximation, that fails to reproduce the thermal form obtained from the approximation would falsify the central claim.

read the original abstract

We consider an inverted harmonic oscillator in the space $L^{2} (\mathbb{S})$ of square-integrable functions on the circle $\mathbb{S}$ and compute its density of states employing the stationary phase approximation. Our computation is based on an oscillatory integral representation of the Schwartz kernel of the time-evolution operator. This demonstrates thermalisation as a semi-classical manifestation of the classical Lyapunov instability -- reported earlier in [Phys. Rev. D 102, 044006; Phys. Rev. D 102, 124047] using heuristic analytic continuation. Our spectral analysis of the Hamiltonian points out and closes the conceptual and mathematical gaps in the preceding literature.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

2 major / 2 minor

Summary. The paper computes the density of states of an inverted harmonic oscillator on L²(𝕊) via the stationary-phase approximation applied to an oscillatory-integral representation of the Schwartz kernel of the time-evolution operator. It claims this yields thermalisation as a direct semi-classical consequence of the classical Lyapunov instability, thereby supplying an independent derivation that closes conceptual and mathematical gaps left by the authors’ earlier heuristic analytic-continuation arguments in Phys. Rev. D 102, 044006 and Phys. Rev. D 102, 124047.

Significance. If the stationary-phase evaluation can be shown to control the error in the spectral density, the result would furnish a mathematically cleaner semi-classical link between horizon-induced classical instability and thermal spectra, strengthening the authors’ prior heuristic findings and offering a template for similar analyses in other unstable gravitational systems.

major comments (2)
  1. [stationary-phase evaluation of the density of states (abstract and main computation)] The central claim that the stationary-phase approximation on the oscillatory integral for the time-evolution kernel produces a density of states whose leading term encodes the thermal spectrum rests on the assumption that remainder terms are negligible; however, no explicit large-parameter limit (e.g., ħ or t scaling), remainder estimate, or comparison with the exact trace formula is supplied, leaving the thermal signature vulnerable to O(1) corrections.
  2. [spectral analysis and comparison with previous literature] The manuscript frames the new computation as independent of the earlier heuristic continuation, yet the target thermalisation result is already known from the cited prior works; without a side-by-side comparison showing that the stationary-phase step supplies genuinely new evidence rather than reproducing the known answer by construction, the independence of the semi-classical demonstration remains unclear.
minor comments (2)
  1. [introduction and setup] The notation L²(𝕊) and the precise embedding of the inverted oscillator on the circle should be defined explicitly at first use to avoid ambiguity for readers unfamiliar with the functional-analytic setting.
  2. [oscillatory-integral representation] A brief statement of the precise large-parameter regime in which the stationary-phase expansion is taken would improve clarity.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

2 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for the careful reading and constructive feedback. The comments highlight important points on rigor and independence that we address below. We propose targeted revisions to strengthen the manuscript while preserving its core semi-classical argument.

read point-by-point responses
  1. Referee: [stationary-phase evaluation of the density of states (abstract and main computation)] The central claim that the stationary-phase approximation on the oscillatory integral for the time-evolution kernel produces a density of states whose leading term encodes the thermal spectrum rests on the assumption that remainder terms are negligible; however, no explicit large-parameter limit (e.g., ħ or t scaling), remainder estimate, or comparison with the exact trace formula is supplied, leaving the thermal signature vulnerable to O(1) corrections.

    Authors: We agree that explicit control of remainder terms would improve the presentation. The stationary-phase contribution from the unstable orbit yields the leading thermal term in the semi-classical regime (small ħ with fixed or scaled t), consistent with standard oscillatory-integral asymptotics. In the revised version we will add a dedicated paragraph specifying the large-parameter limit (ħ → 0) and citing standard remainder bounds from semiclassical analysis that place the error in the density of states at o(1) relative to the leading exponential growth. A full comparison with an exact trace formula is not feasible within the present scope, as the spectrum of the inverted oscillator on the circle lacks a simple closed form; we will instead note consistency with known limiting cases and numerical checks of the propagator. revision: yes

  2. Referee: [spectral analysis and comparison with previous literature] The manuscript frames the new computation as independent of the earlier heuristic continuation, yet the target thermalisation result is already known from the cited prior works; without a side-by-side comparison showing that the stationary-phase step supplies genuinely new evidence rather than reproducing the known answer by construction, the independence of the semi-classical demonstration remains unclear.

    Authors: The derivation is independent because it begins from the classical Lyapunov instability encoded in the phase of the time-evolution kernel and extracts the thermal density directly via stationary phase, without presupposing an analytic continuation of the partition function. The earlier Phys. Rev. D papers used heuristic continuation; the present work supplies a distinct semi-classical route that closes the mathematical gap identified in those references. To clarify this distinction we will insert a short comparative subsection that contrasts the two methods and shows how the oscillatory-integral approach yields the same thermal signature from first principles rather than by construction. revision: yes

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

New stationary-phase computation on oscillatory kernel provides independent semi-classical support

full rationale

The paper computes the density of states for the inverted harmonic oscillator on L²(S) via stationary phase on the oscillatory integral representation of the Schwartz kernel of the time-evolution operator. This is presented as a distinct semi-classical demonstration of thermalisation that closes gaps left by the authors' prior heuristic analytic continuation. The self-citation to Phys. Rev. D 102, 044006 and 124047 is used only to identify the target phenomenon being re-derived; the load-bearing step is the new approximation applied to the kernel, which does not reduce by construction to the cited heuristic. No fitted parameters, self-definitional loops, or uniqueness theorems imported from the same authors appear in the derivation chain. The analysis is therefore self-contained against the stationary-phase method and receives only a minor self-citation adjustment.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 2 axioms · 0 invented entities

The abstract invokes standard functional-analysis and semiclassical-approximation assumptions without introducing new free parameters or postulated entities.

axioms (2)
  • domain assumption The configuration space is L2(S) for the inverted harmonic oscillator.
    Stated as the setting in which the density of states is computed.
  • domain assumption The stationary phase approximation is valid for the oscillatory integral representation of the Schwartz kernel.
    Invoked to obtain the density of states from the time-evolution operator.

pith-pipeline@v0.9.0 · 5640 in / 1509 out tokens · 55256 ms · 2026-05-19T22:20:06.101705+00:00 · methodology

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Reference graph

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