An inverse-system method for identification of damping rate functions in
non-Markovian quantum systems
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2003.08617v1
- Date: Thu, 19 Mar 2020 07:53:10 GMT
- Title: An inverse-system method for identification of damping rate functions in
non-Markovian quantum systems
- Authors: Shibei Xue, Lingyu Tan, Rebing Wu, Min Jiang, Ian R. Petersen
- Abstract summary: We present an inverse-system method to identify damping rate functions which describe non-Markovian environments.
We show that identifiability for the damping rate functions corresponds to the invertibility of the system.
The effectiveness of our method is shown in examples of an atom and three-spin-chain non-Markovian systems.
- Score: 2.7068170693404197
- License: http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/
- Abstract: Identification of complicated quantum environments lies in the core of
quantum engineering, which systematically constructs an environment model with
the aim of accurate control of quantum systems. In this paper, we present an
inverse-system method to identify damping rate functions which describe
non-Markovian environments in time-convolution-less master equations. To access
information on the environment, we couple a finite-level quantum system to the
environment and measure time traces of local observables of the system. By
using sufficient measurement results, an algorithm is designed, which can
simultaneously estimate multiple damping rate functions for different
dissipative channels. Further, we show that identifiability for the damping
rate functions corresponds to the invertibility of the system and a necessary
condition for identifiability is also given. The effectiveness of our method is
shown in examples of an atom and three-spin-chain non-Markovian systems.
Related papers
- Quantifying non-Markovianity via local quantum Fisher information [0.0]
We present a novel metric for quantifying non-Markovianity based on local quantum Fisher information (LQFI)
By comparing the LQFI-based measure to the LQU-based measure, we demonstrate its effectiveness in detecting non-Markovianity.
We show that a positive time derivative of LQFI signals the flow of information from the environment to the system.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2024-09-16T10:53:05Z) - Quantifying spectral signatures of non-Markovianity beyond the Born-Redfield master equation [0.40964539027092917]
Memory or time-non-local effects in open quantum dynamics pose theoretical as well as practical challenges.
We propose a spectroscopic measure of non-Markovianity which can detect persistent non-Markovianity in the system steady state.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2024-05-02T20:38:26Z) - Effect of the readout efficiency of quantum measurement on the system entanglement [44.99833362998488]
We quantify the entanglement for a particle on a 1d quantum random walk under inefficient monitoring.
We find that the system's maximal mean entanglement at the measurement-induced quantum-to-classical crossover is in different ways by the measurement strength and inefficiency.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2024-02-29T18:10:05Z) - Qubit-environment entanglement in time-dependent pure dephasing [0.0]
We show that the methods for quantifying system-environment entanglement can be straightforwardly generalized to time-dependent Hamiltonians.
We use these methods to study the nature of the decoherence of a qubit-oscillator system.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2023-12-05T11:23:25Z) - Engineering Transport via Collisional Noise: a Toolbox for Biology
Systems [44.99833362998488]
We study a generalised XXZ model in the presence of collision noise, which allows to describe environments beyond the standard Markovian formulation.
Results constitute an example of the essential building blocks for the understanding of quantum transport in noisy and warm disordered environments.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2023-11-15T12:55:28Z) - Robust measurements of $n$-point correlation functions of
driven-dissipative quantum systems on a digital quantum computer [0.0]
We propose and demonstrate a unified hierarchical method to measure correlation functions.
The time evolution of the system is repeatedly interrupted by interacting an ancilla qubit with the system.
We implement the method on a quantum computer in order to measure single-particle Green's functions of a driven-dissipative fermionic system.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2022-04-26T15:57:22Z) - Bridging the gap between topological non-Hermitian physics and open
quantum systems [62.997667081978825]
We show how to detect a transition between different topological phases by measuring the response to local perturbations.
Our formalism is exemplified in a 1D Hatano-Nelson model, highlighting the difference between the bosonic and fermionic cases.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-09-22T18:00:17Z) - Sensing quantum chaos through the non-unitary geometric phase [62.997667081978825]
We propose a decoherent mechanism for sensing quantum chaos.
The chaotic nature of a many-body quantum system is sensed by studying the implications that the system produces in the long-time dynamics of a probe coupled to it.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-04-13T17:24:08Z) - Tracing Information Flow from Open Quantum Systems [52.77024349608834]
We use photons in a waveguide array to implement a quantum simulation of the coupling of a qubit with a low-dimensional discrete environment.
Using the trace distance between quantum states as a measure of information, we analyze different types of information transfer.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-03-22T16:38:31Z) - Quantum Markov Chain Monte Carlo with Digital Dissipative Dynamics on
Quantum Computers [52.77024349608834]
We develop a digital quantum algorithm that simulates interaction with an environment using a small number of ancilla qubits.
We evaluate the algorithm by simulating thermal states of the transverse Ising model.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-03-04T18:21:00Z) - Local master equations may fail to describe dissipative critical
behavior [0.0]
Local quantum master equations provide a simple description of interacting subsystems coupled to different reservoirs.
We evaluate the steady-state mean occupation number for varying temperature differences and find that local master equations generally fail to reproduce the results of an exact quantum-Langevin-equation description.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2020-12-17T20:01:24Z)
This list is automatically generated from the titles and abstracts of the papers in this site.
This site does not guarantee the quality of this site (including all information) and is not responsible for any consequences.