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Showing papers on "Open quantum system published in 2019"


Book
08 Jul 2019
TL;DR: This book gives an accessible, albeit mathematically rigorous and self-contained introduction to quantum information theory, starting from primary structures and leading to fundamental results and to exiting open problems.
Abstract: The subject of this book is theory of quantum system presented from information science perspective. The central role is played by the concept of quantum channel and its entropic and information characteristics. Quantum information theory gives a key to understanding elusive phenomena of quantum world and provides a background for development of experimental techniques that enable measuring and manipulation of individual quantum systems. This is important for the new efficient applications such as quantum computing, communication and cryptography. Research in the field of quantum informatics, including quantum information theory, is in progress in leading scientific centers throughout the world. This book gives an accessible, albeit mathematically rigorous and self-contained introduction to quantum information theory, starting from primary structures and leading to fundamental results and to exiting open problems.

308 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The main result is to prove the great versatility of the IBM Q Experience processors, which are able to implement a great variety of paradigmatic open quantum systems models, hence providing a robust and flexible testbed foropen quantum systems theory.
Abstract: The advent of Noisy Intermediate-Scale Quantum (NISQ) technology is changing rapidly the landscape and modality of research in quantum physics. NISQ devices, such as the IBM Q Experience, have very recently proven their capability as experimental platforms accessible to everyone around the globe. Until now, IBM Q Experience processors have mostly been used for quantum computation and simulation of closed systems. Here we show that these devices are also able to implement a great variety of paradigmatic open quantum systems models, hence providing a robust and flexible testbed for open quantum systems theory. During the last decade an increasing number of experiments have successfully tackled the task of simulating open quantum systems in different platforms, from linear optics to trapped ions, from Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) to Cavity Quantum Electrodynamics. Generally, each individual experiment demonstrates a specific open quantum system model, or at most a specific class. Our main result is to prove the great versatility of the IBM Q Experience processors. Indeed, we experimentally implement one and two-qubit open quantum systems, both unital and non-unital dynamics, Markovian and non-Markovian evolutions. Moreover, we realise proof-of-principle reservoir engineering for entangled state generation, demonstrate collisional models, and verify revivals of quantum channel capacity and extractable work, caused by memory effects. All these results are obtained using IBM Q Experience processors publicly available and remotely accessible online.

133 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A semiclassical approach reveals the emergence of a robust discrete time-crystalline phase in the thermodynamic limit in which metastability, dissipation, and interparticle interactions play a crucial role.
Abstract: We establish a link between metastability and a discrete time-crystalline phase in a periodically driven open quantum system. The mechanism we highlight requires neither the system to display any microscopic symmetry nor the presence of disorder, but relies instead on the emergence of a metastable regime. We investigate this in detail in an open quantum spin system, which is a canonical model for the exploration of collective phenomena in strongly interacting dissipative Rydberg gases. Here, a semiclassical approach reveals the emergence of a robust discrete time-crystalline phase in the thermodynamic limit in which metastability, dissipation, and interparticle interactions play a crucial role. We perform numerical simulations in order to investigate the dependence on the range of interactions, from all to all to short ranged, and the scaling with system size of the lifetime of the time crystal.

118 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is proved that a division of the irreversible work can be made into a coherent and incoherent part, which provides an operational criterion for quantifying the coherent contribution in a generic nonequilibrium transformation on a closed quantum system.
Abstract: Exploiting the relative entropy of coherence, we isolate the coherent contribution in the energetics of a driven nonequilibrium quantum system. We prove that a division of the irreversible work can be made into a coherent and incoherent part. This provides an operational criterion for quantifying the coherent contribution in a generic nonequilibrium transformation on a closed quantum system. We then study such a contribution in two physical models of a driven qubit and kicked rotor. In addition, we also show that coherence generation is connected to the nonadiabaticity of a processes, for which it gives the dominant contribution for slow-enough transformations. The amount of generated coherence in the energy eigenbasis is equivalent to the change in diagonal entropy, and here we show that it fulfills a fluctuation theorem.

112 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a tensor network algorithm for the simulation of multitime correlations in open systems is proposed. But the authors focus on the spin-boson model and do not consider the influence functional.
Abstract: In the path integral formulation of the evolution of an open quantum system coupled to a Gaussian, noninteracting environment, the dynamical contribution of the latter is encoded in an object called the influence functional. Here, we relate the influence functional to the process tensor-a more general representation of a quantum stochastic process-describing the evolution. Then, we use this connection to motivate a tensor network algorithm for the simulation of multitime correlations in open systems, building on recent work where the influence functional is represented in terms of time evolving matrix product operators. By exploiting the symmetries of the influence functional, we are able to use our algorithm to achieve orders-of-magnitude improvement in the efficiency of the resulting numerical simulation. Our improved algorithm is then applied to compute exact phonon emission spectra for the spin-boson model with strong coupling, demonstrating a significant divergence from spectra derived under commonly used assumptions of memorylessness.

91 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a procedure to accelerate the relaxation of an open quantum system towards its equilibrium state by reverse-engineering the nonadiabatic master equation, which serves as a shortcut to an abrupt change in the Hamiltonian.
Abstract: We present a procedure to accelerate the relaxation of an open quantum system towards its equilibrium state. The control protocol, termed the shortcut to equilibration, is obtained by reverse-engineering the nonadiabatic master equation. This is a nonunitary control task aimed at rapidly changing the entropy of the system. Such a protocol serves as a shortcut to an abrupt change in the Hamiltonian, i.e., a quench. As an example, we study the thermalization of a particle in a harmonic well. We observe that for short protocols the accuracy improves by 3 orders of magnitude.

90 citations


Posted Content
TL;DR: In this article, a self-contained set of lecture notes covering various aspects of the theory of open quantum systems, at a level appropriate for a one-semester graduate course, is presented.
Abstract: This is a self-contained set of lecture notes covering various aspects of the theory of open quantum system, at a level appropriate for a one-semester graduate course. The main emphasis is on completely positive maps and master equations, both Markovian and non-Markovian.

70 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the Lindblad Master Equation (MLE) is presented together with its derivation and methods of resolution, which is the most general generator of Markovian dynamics in quantum systems.
Abstract: The theory of open quantum system is one of the most essential tools for the development of quantum technologies. Furthermore, the Lindblad (or Gorini-Kossakowski-Sudarshan-Lindblad) Master Equation plays a key role as it is the most general generator of Markovian dynamics in quantum systems. In this paper, we present this equation together with its derivation and methods of resolution. The presentation tries to be as self-contained and straightforward as possible to be useful to readers with no previous knowledge of this field.

69 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, an ensemble of random Lindblad operators is proposed to generate Markovian evolution in the space of the density matrices, including the shape of the eigenvalue distribution in the complex plane.
Abstract: To understand the typical dynamics of an open quantum system in continuous time, we introduce an ensemble of random Lindblad operators, which generate completely positive Markovian evolution in the space of the density matrices. The spectral properties of these operators, including the shape of the eigenvalue distribution in the complex plane, are evaluated by using methods of free probabilities and explained with non-Hermitian random matrix models. We also demonstrate the universality of the spectral features. The notion of an ensemble of random generators of Markovian quantum evolution constitutes a step towards categorization of dissipative quantum chaos.

61 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a coarse-grained averaging technique was proposed to recover complete positivity of the Redfield equation via a coarse graining averaging technique, and general bounds were derived for the timescale above which the positivity is guaranteed.
Abstract: We show how to recover complete positivity (and hence positivity) of the Redfield equation via a coarse-grained averaging technique. We derive general bounds for the coarse graining timescale above which the positivity of the Redfield equation is guaranteed. It turns out that a coarse grain timescale has strong impact on the characteristics of the Lamb shift term and implies, in general, noncommutation between the dissipating and the Hamiltonian components of the generator of the dynamical semigroup. Finally, we specify the analysis to a two-level system or a quantum harmonic oscillator coupled to a fermionic or bosonic thermal environment via dipolelike interaction.

60 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The thermodynamic framework of repeated interactions is generalized to an arbitrary open quantum system in contact with a heat bath, which provides many quantum stochastic processes and quantum causal models with a consistent thermodynamic interpretation.
Abstract: The thermodynamic framework of repeated interactions is generalized to an arbitrary open quantum system in contact with a heat bath. Based on these findings, the theory is then extended to arbitrary measurements performed on the system. This constitutes a direct experimentally testable framework in strong coupling quantum thermodynamics. By construction, it provides many quantum stochastic processes and quantum causal models with a consistent thermodynamic interpretation. The setting can be further used, for instance, to rigorously investigate the interplay between non-Markovianity and nonequilibrium thermodynamics.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors discuss phonon-induced non-Markovian and Markovian features in QD-based optics, including lineshapes in linear absorption experiments, phononinduced incoherence in the Heitler regime, and memory correlations in two-photon coherences.
Abstract: We discuss phonon-induced non-Markovian and Markovian features in QD-based optics. We cover lineshapes in linear absorption experiments, phonon-induced incoherence in the Heitler regime, and memory correlations in two-photon coherences. To quantitatively and qualitatively understand the underlying physics, we present several theoretical models which model the non-Markovian properties of the electron-phonon interaction accurately in different regimes. Examples are the Heisenberg equation of motion approach, the polaron master equation, and Liouville-propagator techniques in the independent boson limit and beyond via the path-integral method. Phenomenological modeling overestimates typically the dephasing due to the finite memory kernel of phonons and we give instructive examples of phonon-mediated coherence such as phonon-dressed anticrossings in Mollow physics, robust quantum state preparation, cavity-feeding and the stabilization of the collapse and revival phenomenon in the strong coupling limit.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors provide a quantitative measure of non-classicality for purely dephasing evolutions, and illustrate how to implement their approach with quantum process tomography experiments.
Abstract: One of the central problems in quantum theory is to characterize, detect, and quantify quantumness in terms of classical strategies. Dephasing processes, caused by non-dissipative information exchange between quantum systems and environments, provides a natural platform for this purpose, as they control the quantum-to-classical transition. Recently, it has been shown that dephasing dynamics itself can exhibit (non)classical traits, depending on the nature of the system-environment correlations and the related (im)possibility to simulate these dynamics with Hamiltonian ensembles–the classical strategy. Here we establish the framework of detecting and quantifying the nonclassicality for pure dephasing dynamics. The uniqueness of the canonical representation of Hamiltonian ensembles is shown, and a constructive method to determine the latter is presented. We illustrate our method for qubit, qutrit, and qubit-pair pure dephasing and describe how to implement our approach with quantum process tomography experiments. Our work is readily applicable to present-day quantum experiments. The presence of processes that cannot be simulated classically in open quantum system dynamics is acknowledged, but an exact quantifier for this non-classical character is still missing. Here, the authors provide a quantitative measure of non-classicality for purely dephasing evolutions.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, it was shown that quantum chaotic systems obeying the eigenstate thermalization hypothesis have eigenstates forming approximate quantum error-correcting codes (AQECC), and that AQECC can be obtained probabilistically from translation invariant energy eigen states of every translation-invariant spin chain, including integrable models.
Abstract: Quantum error correction was invented to allow for fault-tolerant quantum computation. Systems with topological order turned out to give a natural physical realization of quantum error correcting codes (QECC) in their ground spaces. More recently, in the context of the anti-de Sitter/conformal field theory correspondence, it has been argued that eigenstates of CFTs with a holographic dual should also form QECCs. These two examples raise the question of how generally eigenstates of many-body models form quantum codes. In this Letter we establish new connections between quantum chaos and translation invariance in many-body spin systems, on one hand, and approximate quantum error correcting codes (AQECC), on the other hand. We first observe that quantum chaotic systems obeying the eigenstate thermalization hypothesis have eigenstates forming approximate quantum error-correcting codes. Then we show that AQECC can be obtained probabilistically from translation-invariant energy eigenstates of every translation-invariant spin chain, including integrable models. Applying this result to 1D classical systems, we describe a method for using local symmetries to construct parent Hamiltonians that embed these codes into the low-energy subspace of gapless 1D quantum spin chains. As explicit examples we obtain local AQECC in the ground space of the 1D ferromagnetic Heisenberg model and the Motzkin spin chain model with periodic boundary conditions, thereby yielding nonstabilizer codes in the ground space and low energy subspace of physically plausible 1D gapless models.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: How many-body effects influence the zero-point motion of a Josephson junction coupled to a high impedance transmission line is observed, opening many exciting prospects for longstanding quests such as the tailoring of many- body Hamiltonians in the strongly non-linear regime, the observation of Bloch oscillations, or the development of high-impedance qubits.
Abstract: Electromagnetic fields possess zero point fluctuations which lead to observable effects such as the Lamb shift and the Casimir effect. In the traditional quantum optics domain, these corrections remain perturbative due to the smallness of the fine structure constant. To provide a direct observation of non-perturbative effects driven by zero point fluctuations in an open quantum system we wire a highly non-linear Josephson junction to a high impedance transmission line, allowing large phase fluctuations across the junction. Consequently, the resonance of the former acquires a relative frequency shift that is orders of magnitude larger than for natural atoms. Detailed modeling confirms that this renormalization is non-linear and quantum. Remarkably, the junction transfers its non-linearity to about thirty environmental modes, a striking back-action effect that transcends the standard Caldeira-Leggett paradigm. This work opens many exciting prospects for longstanding quests such as the tailoring of many-body Hamiltonians in the strongly non-linear regime, the observation of Bloch oscillations, or the development of high-impedance qubits. Advances in the design and fabrication of superconducting devices enable physicists to design and monitor quantum electronic systems in synthetic environments. Here the authors observe how many-body effects influence the zero-point motion of a Josephson junction coupled to a high impedance transmission line.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors give a brief review of the most relevant theoretical results concerning the uniqueness of the steady-state solution of the Lindblad-Gorini-Kossakowski-Sudarshan master equation and the criteria which guarantee relaxingness and irreducibility of dynamical semigroups.
Abstract: The aims of this paper are two. The first is to give a brief review of the most relevant theoretical results concerning the uniqueness of the steady-state solution of the Lindblad-Gorini-Kossakowski-Sudarshan master equation and the criteria which guarantee relaxingness and irreducibility of dynamical semigroups. In particular, we test and discuss their physical meaning by considering their applicability to the characterisation of the simplest open quantum system \emph{i.e.} a two-level system coupled to a bath of harmonic oscillators at zero temperature. The second aim is to provide a set of sufficient conditions which guarantees the uniqueness of the steady-state solution and its attractivity. Starting from simple assumptions, we derive simple criteria that can be efficiently exploited to characterise the behavior of dissipative systems of spins and bosons (with truncated Fock space), and a wide variety of other open quantum systems recently studied.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors analyze the partition function of three-dimensional quantum gravity on the twisted solid torus and the ensuing dual field theory, in a self-contained manner and then compute quasi-local amplitudes for its boundary states.

Journal ArticleDOI
23 Sep 2019
TL;DR: It is found that, for any $d$-dimensional system in an arbitrary initial state, provably optimal cooling protocols with surprisingly simple structure and exponential convergence to the ground state are found.
Abstract: Heat-Bath Algorithmic Cooling is a set of techniques for producing highly pure quantum systems by utilizing a surrounding heat-bath and unitary interactions. These techniques originally used the thermal environment only to fully thermalize ancillas at the environment temperature. Here we extend HBAC protocols by optimizing over the thermalization strategy. We find, for any $d$-dimensional system in an arbitrary initial state, provably optimal cooling protocols with surprisingly simple structure and exponential convergence to the ground state. Compared to the standard ones, these schemes can use fewer or no ancillas and exploit memory effects to enhance cooling. We verify that the optimal protocols are robusts to various deviations from the ideal scenario. For a single target qubit, the optimal protocol can be well approximated with a Jaynes-Cummings interaction between the system and a single thermal bosonic mode for a wide range of environmental temperatures. This admits an experimental implementation close to the setup of a micromaser, with a performance competitive with leading proposals in the literature. The proposed protocol provides an experimental setup that illustrates how non-Markovianity can be harnessed to improve cooling. On the technical side we 1. introduce a new class of states called maximally active states and discuss their thermodynamic significance in terms of optimal unitary control, 2. introduce a new set of thermodynamic processes, called $\beta$-permutations, whose access is sufficient to simulate a generic thermalization process, 3. show how to use abstract toolbox developed within the resource theory approach to thermodynamics to perform challenging optimizations, while combining it with open quantum system dynamics tools to approximate optimal solutions within physically realistic setups.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used a six-photon quantum simulator to investigate classical and quantum information proliferation in quantum Darwinism process, where many environmental photons are scattered from an observed quantum system and they are collected and used to infer the systems state.
Abstract: Quantum-to-classical transition is a fundamental open question in physics frontier. Quantum decoherence theory points out that the inevitable interaction with environment is a sink carrying away quantum coherence, which is responsible for the suppression of quantum superposition in open quantum system. Recently, quantum Darwinism theory further extends the role of environment, serving as communication channel, to explain the classical objectivity emerging in quantum measurement process. Here, we used a six-photon quantum simulator to investigate classical and quantum information proliferation in quantum Darwinism process. In the simulation, many environmental photons are scattered from an observed quantum system and they are collected and used to infer the systems state. We observed redundancy of systems classical information and suppression of quantum correlation in the fragments of environmental photons. Our results experimentally show that the classical objectivity of quantum system can be established through quantum Darwinism mechanism.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, it was shown that the individual constituents of a generic open quantum system will undergo completely synchronous limit cycles which are, to first order, robust to symmetry-breaking perturbations, and that when these systems are perturbed, their non-linear responses elicit long-lived signatures of both phase and frequency-locking.
Abstract: In nature, instances of synchronisation abound across a diverse range of environments. In the quantum regime, however, synchronisation is typically observed by identifying an appropriate parameter regime in a specific system. In this work we show that this need not be the case, identifying conditions which, when satisfied, guarantee that the individual constituents of a generic open quantum system will undergo completely synchronous limit cycles which are, to first order, robust to symmetry-breaking perturbations. We then describe how these conditions can be satisfied by the interplay between several elements: interactions, local dephasing and the presence of a strong dynamical symmetry - an operator which guarantees long-time non-stationary dynamics. These elements cause the formation of entanglement and off-diagonal long-range order which drive the synchronised response of the system. To illustrate these ideas we present two central examples: a chain of quadratically dephased spin-1s and the many-body charge-dephased Hubbard model. In both cases perfect phase-locking occurs throughout the system, regardless of the specific microscopic parameters or initial states. Furthermore, when these systems are perturbed, their non-linear responses elicit long-lived signatures of both phase and frequency-locking.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is demonstrated how a properly designed spin-orbit device can be used to control quantum interference between vectorial modes of light by simply adjusting the device parameters and no need of interferometric setups.
Abstract: Structured photons are nowadays an important resource in classical and quantum optics due to the richness of properties they show under propagation, focusing, and in their interaction with matter. Vectorial modes of light in particular, a class of modes where the polarization varies across the beam profile, have already been used in several areas ranging from microscopy to quantum information. One of the key ingredients needed to exploit the full potential of complex light in the quantum domain is the control of quantum interference, a crucial resource in fields like quantum communication, sensing, and metrology. Here we report a tunable Hong-Ou-Mandel interference between vectorial modes of light. We demonstrate how a properly designed spin-orbit device can be used to control quantum interference between vectorial modes of light by simply adjusting the device parameters and no need of interferometric setups. We believe our result can find applications in fundamental research and quantum technologies based on structured light by providing a new tool to control quantum interference in a compact, efficient, and robust way.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, it was shown that the dynamics of any open quantum system that is initially correlated with its environment can be described by a set of completely positive maps, where $d$ is the dimension of the system, and only one such map is required for the special case of no initial correlations.
Abstract: We show that the dynamics of any open quantum system that is initially correlated with its environment can be described by a set of ${d}^{2}$ (or less) completely positive maps, where $d$ is the dimension of the system. Only one such map is required for the special case of no initial correlations. The same maps describe the dynamics of any system-environment state obtained from the initial state by a local operation on the system. The reduction of the system dynamics to a set of completely positive maps allows known numerical and analytic tools for uncorrelated initial states to be applied to the general case of initially correlated states, which we exemplify by solving the qubit dephasing model for such states, and provides a natural approach to quantum Markovianity for this case. We show that this set of completely positive maps can be experimentally characterized using only local operations on the system, via a generalization of noise spectroscopy protocols. As further applications, we first consider the problem of retrodicting the dynamics of an open quantum system which is in an arbitrary state when it becomes accessible to the experimenter and explore the conditions under which retrodiction is possible. We also introduce a related one-sided or limited-access tomography protocol for determining an arbitrary bipartite state, evolving under a sufficiently rich Hamiltonian, via local operations and measurements on just one component. We simulate this protocol for a physical model of particular relevance to nitrogen-vacancy centers and in particular show how to reconstruct the density matrix of a set of three qubits, interacting via dipolar coupling and in the presence of local magnetic fields, by measuring and controlling only one of them.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is found that the loss of semigroup-divisibility is accompanied by a prominent reentrant behavior: Counter to intuition, the level occupation may temporarily increase significantly in order to reach a stationary state with smaller occupation, implying a reversal of the measurable transport current.
Abstract: To extend the classical concept of Markovianity to an open quantum system, different notions of the divisibility of its dynamics have been introduced. Here, we analyze this issue by five complementary approaches: equations of motion, real-time diagrammatics, Kraus-operator sums, as well as time-local and nonlocal (Nakajima-Zwanzig) quantum master equations. As a case study featuring several types of divisible dynamics, we examine in detail an exactly solvable noninteracting fermionic resonant level coupled arbitrarily strongly to a fermionic bath at an arbitrary temperature in the wideband limit. In particular, the impact of divisibility on the time-dependence of the observable level occupation is investigated and compared with typical Markovian approximations. We find that the loss of semigroup-divisibility is accompanied by a prominent reentrant behavior: Counter to intuition, the level occupation may temporarily increase significantly in order to reach a stationary state with smaller occupation, implying a reversal of the measurable transport current. In contrast, the loss of the so-called completely positive divisibility is more subtly signaled by the prohibition of such current reversals in specific time-intervals. Experimentally, it can be detected in the family of transient currents obtained by varying the initial occupation. To quantify the nonzero footprint left by the system in its effective environment, we determine the exact time-dependent state of the latter as well as related information measures such as entropy, exchange entropy, and coherent information.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a framework for simulating relaxation dynamics through a conical intersection of an open quantum system that combines methods to approximate the motion of degrees of freedom with disparate time and energy scales.
Abstract: We present a framework for simulating relaxation dynamics through a conical intersection of an open quantum system that combines methods to approximate the motion of degrees of freedom with disparate time and energy scales. In the vicinity of a conical intersection, a few degrees of freedom render the nuclear dynamics nonadiabatic with respect to the electronic degrees of freedom. We treat these strongly coupled modes by evolving their wavepacket dynamics in the absence of additional coupling exactly. The remaining weakly coupled nuclear degrees of freedom are partitioned into modes that are fast relative to the nonadiabatic coupling and those that are slow. The fast degrees of freedom can be traced out and treated with second-order perturbation theory in the form of the time-convolutionless master equation. The slow degrees of freedom are assumed to be frozen over the ultrafast relaxation and treated as sources of static disorder. In this way, we adopt the recently developed frozen-mode extension to second-order quantum master equations. We benchmark this approach to numerically exact results in models of pyrazine internal conversion and rhodopsin photoisomerization. We use this framework to study the dependence of the quantum yield on the reorganization energy and the characteristic time scale of the bath in a two-mode model of photoisomerization. We find that the yield is monotonically increasing with reorganization energy for a Markovian bath but monotonically decreasing with reorganization energy for a non-Markovian bath. This reflects the subtle interplay between dissipation and decoherence in conical intersection dynamics in the condensed phase.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It turns out that a windowed Fourier transform of the BCF is an appropriate indicator of the quality of the discretization in the multi-Davydov-Ansatz, which turns out to be most favorable for the spin-boson model with sub-Ohmic spectral density.
Abstract: Two different numerically exact methods for open quantum system dynamics, the hierarchy of pure states (HOPS) method, and the multi-Davydov-Ansatz are discussed. We focus on the suitability of the underlying representations of bath correlations. While in the HOPS case the correct description of the bath correlation function (BCF) in the time domain is decisive, it turns out that a windowed Fourier transform of the BCF is an appropriate indicator of the quality of the discretization in the multi-Davydov-Ansatz. For the spin-boson model with sub-Ohmic spectral density considered here, a discretization of the spectral density based on an exponential distribution, used previously, turns out to be most favorable.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a universal scheme is introduced to speed up the dynamics of a driven open quantum system along a prescribed trajectory of interest, which can be implemented in two alternative physical scenarios: one characterized by the presence of balanced gain and loss, the other involves non-Markovian dynamics with time dependent Lindblad operators.
Abstract: A universal scheme is introduced to speed up the dynamics of a driven open quantum system along a prescribed trajectory of interest This framework generalizes counterdiabatic driving to open quantum processes Shortcuts to adiabaticity designed in this fashion can be implemented in two alternative physical scenarios: one characterized by the presence of balanced gain and loss, the other involves non-Markovian dynamics with time-dependent Lindblad operators As an illustration, we engineer superadiabatic cooling, heating, and isothermal strokes for a two-level system, and provide a protocol for the fast thermalization of a quantum oscillator

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the influence of an excited-state quantum phase transition on the quantum-speed-limit time of an open quantum system was investigated, where a central qubit was coupled to a spin environment modeled by a Lipkin-Meshkov-Glick Hamiltonian.
Abstract: We investigate the influence of an excited-state quantum phase transition on the quantum-speed-limit time of an open quantum system. The system consists of a central qubit coupled to a spin environment modeled by a Lipkin-Meshkov-Glick Hamiltonian. We show that when the coupling between qubit and environment is such that the latter is located at the critical energy of the excited-state quantum phase transition, the qubit evolution shows a remarkable slowdown, marked by an abrupt peak in the quantum-speed-limit time. Interestingly, this slowdown at the excited-state quantum phase transition critical point is induced by the singular behavior of the qubit decoherence rate, being independent of the Markovian nature of the environment.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, an all-optical experiment to quantify non-Markovianity in an open quantum system through quantum coherence of a single quantum bit was proposed, where an amplitude damping channel implemented by an optical setup with an intense laser beam simulating a single-photon polarization was used.
Abstract: We propose an all-optical experiment to quantify non-Markovianity in an open quantum system through quantum coherence of a single quantum bit. We use an amplitude damping channel implemented by an optical setup with an intense laser beam simulating a single-photon polarization. The optimization over initial states required to quantify non-Markovianity is analytically evaluated. The experimental results are in very good agreement with the theoretical predictions.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This work investigates the stationary state of an ac-driven system when the driving and dissipation are noncommutative, and shows that the probability distribution can exhibit population inversion and discontinuities, i.e., jumps, for parameters at which coherent destruction of tunneling takes place.
Abstract: If an open quantum system is periodically driven with high frequency and the driving commutes with the system-bath coupling operator, it is known that the system approaches a Floquet-Gibbs state, a generalization of Gibbs states to periodically driven systems. Here, we investigate the stationary state of an ac-driven system when the driving and dissipation are noncommutative. Then, the resulting stationary state does not obey the Floquet-Gibbs distribution, and the system dynamics is determined by inelastic scattering processes of the driving field. Based on the Floquet-Redfield formalism, we show that the probability distribution can exhibit population inversion and discontinuities, i.e., jumps, for parameters at which coherent destruction of tunneling takes place. These discontinuities can be observed as intensity jumps in the emission into the bath.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors studied an open quantum system of free fermions on an infinite lattice coupled to a localized particle source and showed that the particle growth rate is inversely proportional to the input rate when the latter becomes large.
Abstract: We study an open quantum system of free fermions on an infinite lattice coupled to a localized particle source. In the long time limit, the total number of fermions in the system increases linearly with growth rate dependent on the lattice geometry and dimensionality. We express the growth rate in terms of lattice Green functions and derive explicit formulae in one dimension and for the square lattice. The interplay between the dynamics and the coupling to the environment leads, in contrast to classical systems, to a non-monotonic dependence of the particle growth rate on the input rate. We show that for all lattices the particle growth rate is inversely proportional to the input rate when the latter becomes large. This is a manifestation of the quantum Zeno effect.