216 research outputs found
Fluctuating observation time ensembles in the thermodynamics of trajectories
The dynamics of stochastic systems, both classical and quantum, can be
studied by analysing the statistical properties of dynamical trajectories. The
properties of ensembles of such trajectories for long, but fixed, times are
described by large-deviation (LD) rate functions. These LD functions play the
role of dynamical free-energies: they are cumulant generating functions for
time-integrated observables, and their analytic structure encodes dynamical
phase behaviour. This "thermodynamics of trajectories" approach is to
trajectories and dynamics what the equilibrium ensemble method of statistical
mechanics is to configurations and statics. Here we show that, just like in the
static case, there is a variety of alternative ensembles of trajectories, each
defined by their global constraints, with that of trajectories of fixed total
time being just one of these. We show that an ensemble of trajectories where
some time-extensive quantity is constant (and large) but where total
observation time fluctuates, is equivalent to the fixed-time ensemble, and the
LD functions that describe one ensemble can be obtained from those that
describe the other. We discuss how the equivalence between generalised
ensembles can be exploited in path sampling schemes for generating rare
dynamical trajectories.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figure
Non-Markovian non-stationary completely positive open quantum system dynamics
By modeling the interaction of a system with an environment through a renewal
approach, we demonstrate that completely positive non-Markovian dynamics may
develop some unexplored non-standard statistical properties. The renewal
approach is defined by a set of disruptive events, consisting in the action of
a completely positive superoperator over the system density matrix. The random
time intervals between events are described by an arbitrary waiting-time
distribution. We show that, in contrast to the Markovian case, if one performs
a system-preparation (measurement) at an arbitrary time, the subsequent
evolution of the density matrix evolution is modified. The non-stationary
character refers to the absence of an asymptotic master equation even when the
preparation is performed at arbitrary long times. In spite of this property, we
demonstrate that operator expectation values and operators correlations have
the same dynamical structure, establishing the validity of a non-stationary
quantum regression hypothesis. The non-stationary property of the dynamic is
also analyzed through the response of the system to an external weak
perturbation.Comment: 13 pages, 3 figure
Lindblad rate equations
In this paper we derive an extra class of non-Markovian master equations
where the system state is written as a sum of auxiliary matrixes whose
evolution involve Lindblad contributions with local coupling between all of
them, resembling the structure of a classical rate equation. The system
dynamics may develops strong non-local effects such as the dependence of the
stationary properties with the system initialization. These equations are
derived from alternative microscopic interactions, such as complex environments
described in a generalized Born-Markov approximation and tripartite
system-environment interactions, where extra unobserved degrees of freedom
mediates the entanglement between the system and a Markovian reservoir.
Conditions that guarantees the completely positive condition of the solution
map are found. Quantum stochastic processes that recover the system dynamics in
average are formulated. We exemplify our results by analyzing the dynamical
action of non-trivial structured dephasing and depolarizing reservoirs over a
single qubit.Comment: 12 pages, 2 figure
Functional characterization of generalized Langevin equations
We present an exact functional formalism to deal with linear Langevin
equations with arbitrary memory kernels and driven by any noise structure
characterized through its characteristic functional. No others hypothesis are
assumed over the noise, neither the fluctuation dissipation theorem. We found
that the characteristic functional of the linear process can be expressed in
terms of noise's functional and the Green function of the deterministic
(memory-like) dissipative dynamics. This object allow us to get a procedure to
calculate all the Kolmogorov hierarchy of the non-Markov process. As examples
we have characterized through the 1-time probability a noise-induced interplay
between the dissipative dynamics and the structure of different noises.
Conditions that lead to non-Gaussian statistics and distributions with long
tails are analyzed. The introduction of arbitrary fluctuations in fractional
Langevin equations have also been pointed out
The Effect of Stochastic Noise on Quantum State Transfer
We consider the effect of classical stochastic noise on control laser pulses
used in a scheme for transferring quantum information between atoms, or quantum
dots, in separate optical cavities via an optical connection between cavities.
We develop a master equation for the dynamics of the system subject to
stochastic errors in the laser pulses, and use this to evaluate the sensitivity
of the transfer process to stochastic pulse shape errors for a number of
different pulse shapes. We show that under certain conditions, the sensitivity
of the transfer to the noise depends on the pulse shape, and develop a method
for determining a pulse shape that is minimally sensitive to specific errors.Comment: 10 pages, 9 figures, to appear in Physical Review
Squeezing generation and revivals in a cavity-ion system in contact with a reservoir
We consider a system consisting of a single two-level ion in a harmonic trap,
which is localized inside a non-ideal optical cavity at zero temperature and
subjected to the action of two external lasers. We are able to obtain an
analytical solution for the total density operator of the system and show that
squeezing in the motion of the ion and in the cavity field is generated. We
also show that complete revivals of the states of the motion of the ion and of
the cavity field occur periodically.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figure
Entropy, non-ergodicity and non-Gaussian behaviour in ballistic transport
Ballistic transportation introduces new challenges in the thermodynamic
properties of a gas of particles. For example, violation of mixing, ergodicity
and of the fluctuation-dissipation theorem may occur, since all these processes
are connected. In this work, we obtain results for all ranges of diffusion,
i.e., both for subdiffusion and superdiffusion, where the bath is such that it
gives origin to a colored noise. In this way we obtain the skewness and the
non-Gaussian factor for the probability distribution function of the dynamical
variable. We put particular emphasis on ballistic diffusion, and we demonstrate
that in this case, although the second law of thermodynamics is preserved, the
entropy does not reach a maximum and a non-Gaussian behavior occurs. This
implies the non-applicability of the central limit theorem.Comment: 9 pages, 2 figure
Non-equilibrium transition from dissipative quantum walk to classical random walk
We have investigated the time-evolution of a free particle in interaction
with a phonon thermal bath, using the tight-binding approach. A dissipative
quantum walk can be defined and many important non-equilibrium decoherence
properties can be investigated analytically. The non-equilibrium statistics of
a pure initial state have been studied. Our theoretical results indicate that
the evolving wave-packet shows the suppression of Anderson's boundaries
(ballistic peaks) by the presence of dissipation. Many important relaxation
properties can be studied quantitatively, such as von Neumann's entropy and
quantum purity. In addition, we have studied Wigner's function. The
time-dependent behavior of the quantum entanglement between a free particle -in
the lattice- and the phonon bath has been characterized analytically. This
result strongly suggests the non-trivial time-dependence of the off-diagonal
elements of the reduced density matrix of the system. We have established a
connection between the quantum decoherence and the dissipative parameter
arising from interaction with the phonon bath. The time-dependent behavior of
quantum correlations has also been pointed out, showing continuous transition
from quantum random walk to classical random walk, when dissipation increases.Comment: Submitted for publication. 17 pages, 6 figure
A perturbative approach to non-Markovian stochastic Schr\"odinger equations
In this paper we present a perturbative procedure that allows one to
numerically solve diffusive non-Markovian Stochastic Schr\"odinger equations,
for a wide range of memory functions. To illustrate this procedure numerical
results are presented for a classically driven two level atom immersed in a
environment with a simple memory function. It is observed that as the order of
the perturbation is increased the numerical results for the ensembled average
state approach the exact reduced state found via
Imamo\=glu's enlarged system method [Phys. Rev. A. 50, 3650 (1994)].Comment: 17 pages, 4 figure
Radiative corrections in K --> 3 pi decays
We investigate radiative corrections to K --> 3 pi decays. In particular, we
extend the non-relativistic framework developed recently to include real and
virtual photons and show that, in a well-defined power counting scheme, the
results reproduce corrections obtained in the relativistic calculation. Real
photons are included exactly, beyond the soft-photon approximation, and we
compare the result with the latter. The singularities generated by pionium near
threshold are investigated, and a region is identified where standard
perturbation theory in the fine structure constant alpha may be applied. We
expect that the formulae provided allow one to extract S-wave pi pi scattering
lengths from the cusp effect in these decays with high precision.Comment: 57 pages, 17 figure
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