Quantum-classical correspondence in quantum channels
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2407.14067v1
- Date: Fri, 19 Jul 2024 06:53:45 GMT
- Title: Quantum-classical correspondence in quantum channels
- Authors: Bidhi Vijaywargia, Arul Lakshminarayan,
- Abstract summary: Quantum channels describe subsystem or open system evolution.
Four classical Koopman channels are identified that are analogs of the 4 possible quantum channels in a bipartite setting.
- Score: 0.0
- License: http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/
- Abstract: Quantum channels describe subsystem or open system evolution. Using the classical Koopman operator that evolves functions on phase space, 4 classical Koopman channels are identified that are analogs of the 4 possible quantum channels in a bipartite setting. Thus when the complete evolution has a quantum-classical correspondence the correspondence at the level of the subunitary channels can be studied. The channels, both classical and quantum can be interpreted as noisy single particle systems. Having parallel classical and quantum operators gives us new access to study fine details of these major limiting theories. Using a coupled kicked rotor as a generic example, we contrast and compare spectra of the quantum and classical channel. The largest nontrivial mode of the quantum channel is seen to be mostly determined by the stable parts of the classical phase space, even those that are surprisingly small in relation to the scale of an effective $\hbar$. In the case when the dynamics has a significant fraction of chaos the spectrum has a prominent annular density that is approximately described by the single-ring theorem of random matrix theory, and the ring shrinks in size when the classical limit is approached. However, the eigenvalues and modes that survive the classical limit seem to be either scarred by unstable manifolds or, if they exist, stable periodic orbits.
Related papers
- The Hidden Ontological Variable in Quantum Harmonic Oscillators [0.0]
The standard quantum mechanical harmonic oscillator has an exact, dual relationship with a completely classical system.
One finds that, where the classical system always obeys the rule "probability in = probability out", the same probabilities are quantum probabilities in the quantum system.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2024-07-25T16:05:18Z) - Hidden tensor structures [0.0]
A single quantum mechanical system is automatically equipped with infinitely many hidden tensor-like structures.
These hidden structures are at the roots of some well known theoretical constructions.
The discussed structures explain why it is possible to emulate a quantum computer by classical analog circuit devices.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2023-08-08T12:08:15Z) - Exact classical limit of the quantum bouncer [0.0]
We develop a systematic approach to determine the classical limit of periodic quantum systems.
We show that for realistic systems, the quantum corrections are strongly suppressed (by a factor of $sim 10-10$) with respect to the classical result.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2022-08-28T19:44:15Z) - Visualized Wave Mechanics by Coupled Macroscopic Pendula: Classical
Analogue to Driven Quantum Bits [0.0]
We show that it is possible to reconstruct the coherent dynamics of a quantum bit (qubit) using a classical model system.
As a proof of principle, we demonstrate full control of our one-to-one analogue to a qubit by realizing Rabi oscillations, Landau-Zener transitions and Landau-Zener-St"uckelberg-Majorana interferometry.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2022-07-19T14:29:29Z) - Quantum dynamics corresponding to chaotic BKL scenario [62.997667081978825]
Quantization smears the gravitational singularity avoiding its localization in the configuration space.
Results suggest that the generic singularity of general relativity can be avoided at quantum level.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2022-04-24T13:32:45Z) - The role of fluctuations in quantum and classical time crystals [58.720142291102135]
We study the role of fluctuations on the stability of the system and find no distinction between quantum and classical DTCs.
This allows us to probe the fluctuations in an experiment using two strongly coupled parametric resonators subject to classical noise.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2022-03-10T19:00:01Z) - Interactive Protocols for Classically-Verifiable Quantum Advantage [46.093185827838035]
"Interactions" between a prover and a verifier can bridge the gap between verifiability and implementation.
We demonstrate the first implementation of an interactive quantum advantage protocol, using an ion trap quantum computer.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-12-09T19:00:00Z) - Diverging quantum speed limits: a herald of classicality [0.0]
We show that vanishing quantum speed limit (QSL) times can be traced back to reduced uncertainty in quantum observables.
We show that the classicality that emerges due to incoherent mixing of states from the addition of classical noise typically increases the QSL time.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-07-13T18:25:28Z) - Depth-efficient proofs of quantumness [77.34726150561087]
A proof of quantumness is a type of challenge-response protocol in which a classical verifier can efficiently certify quantum advantage of an untrusted prover.
In this paper, we give two proof of quantumness constructions in which the prover need only perform constant-depth quantum circuits.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-07-05T17:45:41Z) - Emergence of classical behavior in the early universe [68.8204255655161]
Three notions are often assumed to be essentially equivalent, representing different facets of the same phenomenon.
We analyze them in general Friedmann-Lemaitre- Robertson-Walker space-times through the lens of geometric structures on the classical phase space.
The analysis shows that: (i) inflation does not play an essential role; classical behavior can emerge much more generally; (ii) the three notions are conceptually distinct; classicality can emerge in one sense but not in another.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2020-04-22T16:38:25Z) - From a quantum theory to a classical one [117.44028458220427]
We present and discuss a formal approach for describing the quantum to classical crossover.
The method was originally introduced by L. Yaffe in 1982 for tackling large-$N$ quantum field theories.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2020-04-01T09:16:38Z)
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.