181 research outputs found
Decoherence and the Nature of System-Environment Correlations
We investigate system-environment correlations based on the exact dynamics of
a qubit and its environment in the framework of pure decoherence (phase
damping). We focus on the relation of decoherence and the build-up of
system-reservoir entanglement for an arbitrary (possibly mixed) initial qubit
state. In the commonly employed regime where the qubit dynamics can be
described by a Markov master equation of Lindblad type, we find that for almost
all qubit initial states inside the Bloch sphere, decoherence is complete while
the total state is still separable - no entanglement is involved. In general,
both "separable" and "entangling" decoherence occurs, depending on temperature
and initial qubit state. Moreover, we find situations where classical and
quantum correlations periodically alternate as a function of time in the regime
of low temperatures
System-environment correlations and Non-Markovian dynamics
We determine the total state dynamics of a dephasing open quantum system
using the standard environment of harmonic oscillators. Of particular interest
are random unitary approaches to the same reduced dynamics and
system-environment correlations in the full model. Concentrating on a model
with an at times negative dephasing rate, the issue of "non-Markovianity" will
also be addressed. Crucially, given the quantum environment, the appearance of
non-Markovian dynamics turns out to be accompanied by a loss of
system-environment correlations. Depending on the initial purity of the qubit
state, these system-environment correlations may be purely classical over the
whole relevant time scale, or there may be intervals of genuine
system-environment entanglement. In the latter case, we see no obvious relation
between the build-up or decay of these quantum correlations and
"Non-Markovianity"
Quantum Decoherence of Two Qubits
It is commonly stated that decoherence in open quantum systems is due to
growing entanglement with an environment. In practice, however, surprisingly
often decoherence may equally well be described by random unitary dynamics
without invoking a quantum environment at all. For a single qubit, for
instance, pure decoherence (or phase damping) is always of random unitary type.
Here, we construct a simple example of true quantum decoherence of two qubits:
we present a feasible phase damping channel of which we show that it cannot be
understood in terms of random unitary dynamics. We give a very intuitive
geometrical measure for the positive distance of our channel to the convex set
of random unitary channels and find remarkable agreement with the so-called
Birkhoff defect based on the norm of complete boundedness.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Electronic and phononic properties of the chalcopyrite CuGaS2
The availability of ab initio electronic calculations and the concomitant
techniques for deriving the corresponding lattice dynamics have been profusely
used for calculating thermodynamic and vibrational properties of
semiconductors, as well as their dependence on isotopic masses. The latter have
been compared with experimental data for elemental and binary semiconductors
with different isotopic compositions. Here we present theoretical and
experimental data for several vibronic and thermodynamic properties of CuGa2, a
canonical ternary semiconductor of the chalcopyrite family. Among these
properties are the lattice parameters, the phonon dispersion relations and
densities of states (projected on the Cu, Ga, and S constituents), the specific
heat and the volume thermal expansion coefficient. The calculations were
performed with the ABINIT and VASP codes within the LDA approximation for
exchange and correlation and the results are compared with data obtained on
samples with the natural isotope composition for Cu, Ga and S, as well as for
isotope enriched samples.Comment: 9 pages, 8 Figures, submitted to Phys. Rev
Quantum trajectories for Brownian motion
We present the stochastic Schroedinger equation for the dynamics of a quantum
particle coupled to a high temperature environment and apply it the dynamics of
a driven, damped, nonlinear quantum oscillator. Apart from an initial slip on
the environmental memory time scale, in the mean, our result recovers the
solution of the known non-Lindblad quantum Brownian motion master equation. A
remarkable feature of our approach is its localization property: individual
quantum trajectories remain localized wave packets for all times, even for the
classically chaotic system considered here, the localization being stronger the
smaller .Comment: 4 pages, 3 eps figure
Exact c-number Representation of Non-Markovian Quantum Dissipation
The reduced dynamics of a quantum system interacting with a linear heat bath
finds an exact representation in terms of a stochastic Schr{\"o}dinger
equation. All memory effects of the reservoir are transformed into noise
correlations and mean-field friction. The classical limit of the resulting
stochastic dynamics is shown to be a generalized Langevin equation, and
conventional quantum state diffusion is recovered in the Born--Markov
approximation. The non-Markovian exact dynamics, valid at arbitrary temperature
and damping strength, is exemplified by an application to the dissipative
two-state system.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures. To be published in Phys. Rev. Let
Open system dynamics with non-Markovian quantum trajectories
A non-Markovian stochastic Schroedinger equation for a quantum system coupled
to an environment of harmonic oscillators is presented. Its solutions, when
averaged over the noise, reproduce the standard reduced density operator
without any approximation. We illustrate the power of this approach with
several examples, including exponentially decaying bath correlations and
extreme non-Markovian cases, where the `environment' consists of only a single
oscillator. The latter case shows the decay and revival of a `Schroedinger cat'
state. For strong coupling to a dissipative environment with memory, the
asymptotic state can be reached in a finite time. Our description of open
systems is compatible with different positions of the `Heisenberg cut' between
system and environment.Comment: 4 pages RevTeX, 3 figure
Convolutionless Non-Markovian master equations and quantum trajectories: Brownian motion revisited
Stochastic Schr{\"o}dinger equations for quantum trajectories offer an
alternative and sometimes superior approach to the study of open quantum system
dynamics. Here we show that recently established convolutionless non-Markovian
stochastic Schr{\"o}dinger equations may serve as a powerful tool for the
derivation of convolutionless master equations for non-Markovian open quantum
systems. The most interesting example is quantum Brownian motion (QBM) of a
harmonic oscillator coupled to a heat bath of oscillators, one of the
most-employed exactly soluble models of open system dynamics. We show
explicitly how to establish the direct connection between the exact
convolutionless master equation of QBM and the corresponding convolutionless
exact stochastic Schr\"odinger equation.Comment: 18 pages, RevTe
On the driven Frenkel-Kontorova model: I. Uniform sliding states and dynamical domains of different particle densities
The dynamical behavior of a harmonic chain in a spatially periodic potential
(Frenkel-Kontorova model, discrete sine-Gordon equation) under the influence of
an external force and a velocity proportional damping is investigated. We do
this at zero temperature for long chains in a regime where inertia and damping
as well as the nearest-neighbor interaction and the potential are of the same
order. There are two types of regular sliding states: Uniform sliding states,
which are periodic solutions where all particles perform the same motion
shifted in time, and nonuniform sliding states, which are quasi-periodic
solutions where the system forms patterns of domains of different uniform
sliding states. We discuss the properties of this kind of pattern formation and
derive equations of motion for the slowly varying average particle density and
velocity. To observe these dynamical domains we suggest experiments with a
discrete ring of at least fifty Josephson junctions.Comment: Written in RevTeX, 9 figures in PostScrip
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