Consider a harmonic oscillator system with Hamiltonian
$$\hat{H} = \frac{1}{2} A \hat{u}^2 + \frac{1}{2} B \hat{v}^2 \qquad [\hat{u}, \hat{v}]=i \gamma $$
where $A$, $B$, and $\gamma$ are all real. This system has resonance frequency $\omega_0 = \gamma \sqrt{A B}$. Suppose we are at nonzero temperature with $\beta \equiv 1/k_b T$. Denote the zero point fluctuations in $\hat{u}$ as
$$u_{\text{zpf}}^2 \equiv \langle 0 | \hat{u}^2 | 0 \rangle = \frac{\gamma}{2} \left( \frac{B}{A} \right)^{1/2}\,.$$
Using the usual Heisenberg time dependence $a(t) = a(0)e^{-i \omega_0 t}$ and the Planck distribution
$$\langle \hat{n} \rangle = \frac{1}{\exp \left( \beta \hbar \omega_0 \right) - 1}$$
one computes the correlation function for $\hat{u}$ as
$$ \langle \hat{u}(t) \hat{u}(0)\rangle = u_{\text{zpf}}^2 \left[ \coth(\hbar \omega_0 \beta / 2)\cos(\omega_0 t) - i \sin(\omega_0 t) \right] \, . $$
One can then define a spectral density as the Fourier transform of the time correlation function
$$ \begin{align} S_{uu}(\omega) &\equiv \int dt \langle \hat{u}(t)\hat{u}(0)\rangle e^{i \omega t} \\ &= \frac{u_{\text{zpf}}^2}{2} \left\{ \delta(\omega + \omega_0) \left[ \coth(\hbar \omega_0 \beta / 2) - 1 \right] - \delta(\omega - \omega_0) \left[ \coth(-\hbar \omega_0 \beta / 2) - 1 \right] \right\} \, . \end{align} $$
What does $S_{uu}(\omega)$ mean? In other words, what information about the oscillator does $S_{uu}(\omega)$ tell me?
Some notes:
I understand the spectral density of a random process in classical physics. In the simplest sense it is the amount of power per unit frequency range in the process. However, the quantum version is somewhat different. Unlike the usual classical spectral density it is different at positive and negative frequencies (because the quantum correlation function is complex). I have read that the quantum spectral density is related to emission and absorption rates into and out of a thermal bath. In particular, the negative frequency part of the spectral density supposedly corresponds to emission of a quantum of energy, whereas the positive frequency part corresponds to absorption. However, I have never seen a proof of this idea or an example problem in which it can be seen that those precesses are described by the spectral density. A good answer to this question could focus on that relationship, possibly showing the connection between the two delta functions in the $S_{uu}(\omega)$ computed in this example and their corresponding emission and absorption processes.
References:
Michel Devoret's Les Houches notes on quantum fluctuations in electrical systems
Paper by J. Martinis which partially rehashes the Devoret notes and uses the spectral density to compute decay rates, but doesn't explain why that works
Fairly comprehensive notes by Ingold
Similar question with answer unsatisfactory for my question
will add more as they are found and/or suggested