I'm interested in applying the adiabatic theorem to the forced harmonic oscillator with time dependent hamiltonian of the form:
$$H(t) = \hbar \omega(a^{\dagger}a + \frac{1}{2}) - f(t)a - f^{*}(t)a^{\dagger}$$
where $f(t)$ is an arbitrary function of time and $f^{*}(t)$ is its complex conjugate. I've solved the problem exactly for the system state $|\Psi (t) \rangle$ which is a coherent state. In order to apply the adiabatic theorem I need to solve for the instantaneous eigenstates of the Hamiltonian $|E^{r}(t)\rangle$, which are not the same as the system state $|\Psi (t)\rangle$. $|E^{r}(t')\rangle$ is an eigenstate of $H(t')$ only at time $t = t'$
I'm not sure where to begin, I tried expanding the eigenstates as a linear combination of the excited states of the simple harmonic oscillator, just like a coherent state. But have gotten stuck. Can anyone point me in the right direction?