The exposition of linear response theory, in the context of
quantum statistics, can be found in a paper by
Ryogo Kubo. This defines particularly the
Kubo formula, which considers the general case that the "force" is a perturbation of the basic operator of the system, the
Hamiltonian, \hat H_0 \to \hat{H}_0 -h(t')\hat{B}(t') where \hat B corresponds to a measurable quantity as input, while the output is the perturbation of the thermal expectation of another measurable quantity \hat A(t). The Kubo formula then defines the quantum-statistical calculation of the
susceptibility \chi ( t -t' ) by a general formula involving only the mentioned operators. \chi ( t -t' )= -(i/\hbar )\cdot \langle [\hat{A }(t-t' ),\hat B(0)]\rangle_{\text{thermal expectation}}, where the brackets mean the thermal expectation value, the expression [... , ...] the quantum
commutator, and \hat{A(t-t')} must be evaluated in the quantum-mechanical
interaction picture with the Hamiltonian \hat{H}_0. --> As a consequence of the principle of
causality the complex-valued function \tilde{\chi }(\omega ) has poles only in the lower half-plane. This leads to the
Kramers–Kronig relations, which relates the real and the imaginary parts of \tilde{\chi }(\omega ) by integration. The simplest example is once more the
damped harmonic oscillator. ==Nonequilibrium linear response formula==