The action of free scalar field theory is as follows: $$ S=\int d^4 x \frac{\dot{\phi}^2}{2}-\frac{\phi(m^2-\nabla^2)\phi}{2}. $$
I have been thinking to redefine field as $$\phi'(x)=\sqrt{m^2-\nabla^2}\phi(x),$$ where I assume that I can separate the operator $(m^2-\nabla^2)$ as $\sqrt{m^2-\nabla^2}\sqrt{m^2-\nabla^2}$ and integrate one of them by part (by infinite expansion of the square root of Helmholtz operator). The hamiltonian becomes
$$ H=\int d^3x\frac{\pi'(m^2-\nabla^2)\pi'}{2}+\frac{\phi'^2}{2}. $$
One can check the equation of motion and solutions are consistent to the original free field theory (as it should be), the things I am worried are:
Is it fair to do the infinite expansion+integration by part?
Since there are infinite series in the field redefinition, is it nonlocal? According to Wavefunction in quantum mechanics and locality and Why are higher order Lagrangians called 'non-local'?, it seems to be nonlocal. However, since there is no time derivatives in the square root, the initial data at every space point should be two, which corresponds to one dof at every point. If the infinite expansion is valid, one can know the field configuration $\phi'(x)$ if we know $\phi(x)$, it's not clear to me that whether we need all those initial data for the infinite series of derivative.
The above simple example might be too trivial, the question I am investigating is whether the following action stable or not, $$ H=\int d^3x \frac{1}{4}\pi \frac{1}{(1+2\beta \nabla^2)}\pi-\phi(\beta\nabla^2\nabla^2+\nabla^2)\phi, $$ where $\beta$ is a constant. I was thinking use the non-local field redefinition $$ \pi':=\frac{1}{\sqrt{1+2\beta\nabla^2}}\pi,\qquad \phi':=\sqrt{1+2\beta\nabla^2}\phi, $$ to rewrite the hamiltonian as $$ H=\int d^3x \frac{1}{4}\pi'^2 -\phi\frac{(\beta\nabla^2\nabla^2+\nabla^2)}{1+2\beta\nabla^2}\phi, $$ which is guaranteed to be no-ghost. I agree the Hamiltonian I start with is rather unusual but it is a reduced Hamiltonian of a constrained higher derivative theory.
It is not obvious to see how to analyze this by usual canonical transformation, is there any good way to analyze this or could anyone tell me what will go wrong with this kind of field redefinition?