Physics:Quantum Markovian dynamics: Difference between revisions

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{{Short description|Quantum Collection topic on Quantum Markovian dynamics}}
{{Short description|Quantum Collection topic on Quantum Markovian dynamics}}
 
{{Quantum book backlink|Open quantum systems}}
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'''Markovian quantum dynamics''' describe the time evolution of open quantum systems in the absence of memory effects. In this regime, the future state of the system depends only on its present state and not on its past history.<ref name="BreuerBook">{{cite book |last=Breuer |first=H.-P. |last2=Petruccione |first2=F. |title=The Theory of Open Quantum Systems |publisher=Oxford University Press |year=2002}}</ref><ref name="MIT_OCW">{{cite web |url=https://ocw.mit.edu/courses/22-51-quantum-theory-of-radiation-interactions-fall-2012/resources/mit22_51f12_ch8/ |title=22.51 Course Notes, Chapter 8: Open Quantum Systems |website=MIT OpenCourseWare |access-date=2026-04-12}}</ref>
'''Markovian dynamics''' markovian quantum dynamics describe the time evolution of open quantum systems in the absence of memory effects. In this regime, the future state of the system depends only on its present state and not on its past history. This approximation is widely used in quantum optics, quantum information, and condensed matter physics. Markovian quantum dynamics describe the time evolution of open quantum systems in the absence of memory effects. In this regime, the future state of the system depends only on its present state and not on its past history. This approximation is widely used in quantum optics, quantum information, and condensed matter physics. This reflects the absence of memory and ensures consistent forward evolution.
This approximation is widely used in quantum optics, quantum information, and condensed matter physics.
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This neglects system–environment correlations.
This neglects system–environment correlations.


Together, these assumptions lead to a time-local master equation.<ref name="MIT_OCW" />
Together, these assumptions lead to a time-local master equation.<ref name="MIT_OCW">{{cite web |url=https://ocw.mit.edu/courses/22-51-quantum-theory-of-radiation-interactions-fall-2012/resources/mit22_51f12_ch8/ |title=22.51 Course Notes, Chapter 8: Open Quantum Systems |website=MIT OpenCourseWare |access-date=2026-04-12}}</ref>


== Dynamical behavior ==
== Dynamical behavior ==
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== Physical significance ==
== Physical significance ==


Markovian quantum dynamics provide a simplified but powerful description of open quantum systems. They capture the essential features of irreversible processes and form the foundation of the Lindblad formalism.<ref name="BreuerBook" />
Markovian quantum dynamics provide a simplified but powerful description of open quantum systems. They capture the essential features of irreversible processes and form the foundation of the Lindblad formalism.<ref name="BreuerBook">{{cite book |last=Breuer |first=H.-P. |last2=Petruccione |first2=F. |title=The Theory of Open Quantum Systems |publisher=Oxford University Press |year=2002}}</ref>


They represent the standard approximation for describing decoherence and dissipation in many physical systems.
They represent the standard approximation for describing decoherence and dissipation in many physical systems.
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{{#invoke:PhysicsQC|tocHeadingAndList|Physics:Quantum basics/See also}}
{{#invoke:PhysicsQC|tocHeadingAndList|Physics:Quantum basics/See also}}


=References=
= References =
{{reflist|3}}
{{reflist|3}}


{{Author|Harold Foppele}}
{{Author|Harold Foppele}}


{{Sourceattribution|Markovian quantum dynamics|1}}
{{Sourceattribution|Physics:Quantum Markovian dynamics|1}}

Latest revision as of 00:31, 24 May 2026

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Next : Non-Markovian dynamics →

Markovian dynamics markovian quantum dynamics describe the time evolution of open quantum systems in the absence of memory effects. In this regime, the future state of the system depends only on its present state and not on its past history. This approximation is widely used in quantum optics, quantum information, and condensed matter physics. Markovian quantum dynamics describe the time evolution of open quantum systems in the absence of memory effects. In this regime, the future state of the system depends only on its present state and not on its past history. This approximation is widely used in quantum optics, quantum information, and condensed matter physics. This reflects the absence of memory and ensures consistent forward evolution.

Quantum Markovian dynamics.

Markovian quantum dynamics

Definition

A quantum process is Markovian if the evolution of the density operator ρ(t) is governed by a time-local equation:

dρ(t)dt=[ρ(t)].

Here is a generator that does not depend on the past history of the system.

Semigroup property

Markovian dynamics satisfy the semigroup property:

Φ(t+s)=Φ(t)Φ(s),

where Φ(t) is the dynamical map.

This reflects the absence of memory and ensures consistent forward evolution.

Lindblad form

The most general generator of Markovian quantum dynamics is given by the Lindblad (GKSL) equation:

dρdt=i[H^,ρ]+k(LkρLk12{LkLk,ρ}).

This form guarantees:

  • complete positivity
  • trace preservation
  • physically consistent evolution[1]

Physical interpretation

Markovian dynamics correspond to:

  • irreversible loss of information
  • monotonic decay of coherence
  • absence of memory effects

Information flows only from the system to the environment.

Conditions for validity

The Markovian approximation is not always valid. It relies on several physical assumptions.

Weak coupling

The interaction between system and environment must be sufficiently weak so that correlations remain small.

Fast environment

The environment must relax on timescales much shorter than the system dynamics.

Born–Markov approximation

The total system is approximated as

ρtotρρenv.

This neglects system–environment correlations.

Together, these assumptions lead to a time-local master equation.[2]

Dynamical behavior

Markovian systems exhibit simple and predictable time evolution.

Exponential decay

Populations and coherences typically decay exponentially:

ρij(t)eγt.

Monotonicity

Quantities such as coherence and distinguishability decrease monotonically over time.

There is no revival of quantum features.

Relation to decoherence

Decoherence is often modeled using Markovian dynamics.

Markovian decoherence

Leads to:

  • irreversible suppression of interference
  • rapid decay of off-diagonal density matrix elements
  • classical statistical mixtures

Limitation

Real systems may deviate from this behavior when memory effects are present.

Applications

Markovian dynamics are used extensively in physics.

Quantum optics

Describes spontaneous emission, cavity loss, and radiative decay.

Quantum information

Used to model noise channels and decoherence in qubits.[3]

Condensed matter

Applies to transport, relaxation, and thermalization processes.

Physical significance

Markovian quantum dynamics provide a simplified but powerful description of open quantum systems. They capture the essential features of irreversible processes and form the foundation of the Lindblad formalism.[4]

They represent the standard approximation for describing decoherence and dissipation in many physical systems.

See also

Table of contents (217 articles)

Index

Full contents

References

  1. Lindblad, Göran (1976). "On the generators of quantum dynamical semigroups". Communications in Mathematical Physics 48 (2): 119–130. doi:10.1007/BF01608499. https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/BF01608499. 
  2. "22.51 Course Notes, Chapter 8: Open Quantum Systems". https://ocw.mit.edu/courses/22-51-quantum-theory-of-radiation-interactions-fall-2012/resources/mit22_51f12_ch8/. 
  3. Kjaergaard, Morten; Schwartz, Michael E.; Braumüller, Jochen; Krantz, Philip; Wang, J. I.-J.; Gustavsson, Simon; Oliver, William D. (2020). "Engineering high-coherence superconducting qubits". Nature Reviews Materials 5: 309–324. doi:10.1038/s41578-021-00370-4. https://www.nature.com/articles/s41578-021-00370-4. 
  4. Breuer, H.-P.; Petruccione, F. (2002). The Theory of Open Quantum Systems. Oxford University Press. 


Author: Harold Foppele


Source attribution: Physics:Quantum Markovian dynamics