Recent experimental and theoretical studies indicate that intramolecular
energy redistribution (IVR) is nonstatistical on intermediate timescales even
in fairly large molecules. Therefore, it is interesting to revisit the the old
topic of IVR versus quantum control and one expects that a classical-quantum
perspective is appropriate to gain valuable insights into the issue. However,
understanding classical phase space transport in driven systems is a
prerequisite for such a correspondence based approach and is a challenging task
for systems with more then two degrees of freedom. In this work we undertake a
detailed study of the classical dynamics of a minimal model system - two
kinetically coupled coupled Morse oscillators in the presence of a
monochromatic laser field. Using the technique of wavelet transforms a
representation of the high dimensional phase space, the resonance network or
Arnold web, is constructed and analysed. The key structures in phase space
which regulate the dissociation dynamics are identified. Furthermore, we show
that the web is nonuniform with the classical dynamics exhibiting extensive
stickiness, resulting in anomalous transport. Our work also shows that pairwise
irrational barriers might be crucial even in higher dimensional systems.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures. Contribution to William H. Miller festschrif