We solve the higher order equations of the theory of the strong perturbations
in quantum mechanics given in M. Frasca, Phys. Rev. A 45, 43 (1992), by
assuming that, at the leading order, the wave function goes adiabatically. This
is accomplished by deriving the unitary operator of adiabatic evolution for the
leading order. In this way it is possible to show that at least one of the
causes of the problem of phase-mixing, whose effect is the polynomial increase
in time of the perturbation terms normally called secularities, arises from the
shifts of the perturbation energy levels due to the unperturbed part of the
hamiltonian. An example is given for a two-level system that, anyway, shows a
secularity at second order also in the standard theory of small perturbations.
The theory is applied to the quantum analog of a classical problem that can
become chaotic, a particle under the effect of two waves of different
amplitudes, frequencies and wave numbers.Comment: 13 pages, Late