Interacting quantum systems evolving from an uncorrelated composite initial
state generically develop quantum correlations -- entanglement. As a
consequence, a local description of interacting quantum system is impossible as
a rule. A unitarily evolving (isolated) quantum system generically develops
extensive entanglement: the magnitude of the generated entanglement will
increase without bounds with the effective Hilbert space dimension of the
system. It is conceivable, that coupling of the interacting subsystems to local
dephasing environments will restrict the generation of entanglement to such
extent, that the evolving composite system may be considered as approximately
disentangled. This conjecture is addressed in the context of some common models
of a bipartite system with linear and nonlinear interactions and local coupling
to dephasing environments. Analytical and numerical results obtained imply that
the conjecture is generally false. Open dynamics of the quantum correlations is
compared to the corresponding evolution of the classical correlations and a
qualitative difference is found.Comment: 35 pages, 10 figures. Revised according to comments of the referees.
Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.