Denote the input of a system by , and the response of the system by . Generally, the value of will depend not only on the present value of, but also on past values. Approximately is a weighted sum of the previous values of, with the weights given by the linear response function : The explicit term on the right-hand side is the leading order term of a Volterra expansion for the full nonlinear response. If the system in question is highly non-linear, higher order terms in the expansion, denoted by the dots, become important and the signal transducer cannot adequately be described just by its linear response function. The complex-valued Fourier transform of the linear response function is very useful as it describes the output of the system if the input is a sine wave with frequency. The output reads with amplitude gain and phase shift.
Example
Consider a damped harmonic oscillator with input given by an external driving force, The complex-valued Fourier transform of the linear response function is given by The amplitude gain is given by the magnitude of the complex number and the phase shift by the arctan of the imaginary part of the function, divided by the real one. From this representation, we see that for small the Fourier transform of the linear response function yields a pronounced maximum at the frequency. The linear response function for a harmonic oscillator is mathematically identical to that of an RLC circuit. The width of the maximum typically is much smaller than so that the Quality factor can be extremely large.
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" h is a perturbation of the basic operator of the system, the Hamiltonian, where corresponds to a measurable quantity as input, while the output x is the perturbation of the thermal expectation of another measurable quantity. The Kubo formula then defines the quantum-statistical calculation of the susceptibility by a general formula involving only the mentioned operators. As a consequence of the principle of causality the complex-valued function has poles only in the lower half-plane. This leads to the Kramers–Kronig relations, which relates the real and the imaginary parts of by integration. The simplest example is once more the damped harmonic oscillator.