Physics:Quantum Non-Markovian dynamics: Difference between revisions

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Latest revision as of 00:31, 24 May 2026

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Non-Markovian dynamics non-Markovian quantum dynamics describe the evolution of open quantum systems in the presence of memory effects. In this regime, the future evolution depends not only on the present state but also on the system’s history. Non-Markovian effects are important in strongly coupled systems, structured environments, and low-temperature physics. Non-Markovian quantum dynamics describe the evolution of open quantum systems in the presence of memory effects. In this regime, the future evolution depends not only on the present state but also on the system’s history. Non-Markovian effects are important in strongly coupled systems, structured environments, and low-temperature physics. A quantum process is non-Markovian if its evolution cannot be described by a memoryless (time-local) generator.

Quantum Non-Markovian dynamics.

Non-Markovian quantum dynamics

Definition

A quantum process is non-Markovian if its evolution cannot be described by a memoryless (time-local) generator.

Memory dependence

The evolution of the density operator may depend on earlier states:

dρ(t)dt=0tK(ts)ρ(s)ds,

where K(t) is a memory kernel.[1]

This explicitly introduces dependence on the past history of the system.

Breakdown of Markovian approximation

Non-Markovian behavior arises when the assumptions of the Markovian approximation fail.

Strong coupling

When the interaction between system and environment is strong, correlations persist and memory effects become significant.

Structured environments

Environments with non-flat spectral densities (e.g. photonic crystals) can store and return information to the system.

Finite environments

Small environments cannot act as perfect reservoirs and may feed information back into the system.

Information backflow

A defining feature of non-Markovian dynamics is the possibility of information backflow.

Physical meaning

  • information lost to the environment can return
  • coherence may temporarily increase
  • distinguishability between states can grow

This contrasts with Markovian evolution, where information is lost irreversibly.

Trace distance criterion

One way to detect non-Markovianity is through the trace distance:

D(ρ1,ρ2)=12Tr|ρ1ρ2|.

If D increases at some time, this indicates information backflow.[1]

Dynamical behavior

Non-Markovian systems exhibit richer time evolution than Markovian systems.

Non-exponential decay

Decay processes may deviate from simple exponential laws:

ρij(t)≁eγt.

Coherence revival

Quantum coherence can partially recover after decay:

ρij(t)

over certain time intervals.

Oscillatory dynamics

Systems may show oscillations due to feedback from the environment.

Time-local formulation

Even non-Markovian dynamics can sometimes be written in a time-local form:

dρ(t)dt=(t)[ρ(t)],

where the generator (t) is time-dependent.

In this case, non-Markovianity is associated with the breakdown of divisibility of the dynamical map.[1]

Relation to decoherence

Decoherence in realistic systems often includes non-Markovian corrections.

Non-Markovian decoherence

Leads to:

  • temporary recoherence
  • slower decay of interference
  • environment-induced memory effects

Physical relevance

These effects are especially important in solid-state qubits and nanoscale systems.

Applications

Non-Markovian dynamics are relevant in many areas.

Quantum information

Can be exploited to:

  • preserve coherence
  • improve control protocols
  • enhance quantum memory

Quantum optics

Structured reservoirs produce non-Markovian emission and absorption behavior.

Condensed matter

Strong coupling and low temperatures naturally lead to memory effects.

Physical significance

Non-Markovian quantum dynamics provide a more complete description of open quantum systems beyond the Lindblad approximation. They reveal the role of memory, correlations, and feedback in quantum evolution.[1]

They are essential for understanding realistic quantum systems and advanced quantum technologies.

See also

Table of contents (217 articles)

Index

Full contents

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Breuer, H.-P.; Laine, E.-M.; Piilo, J.; Vacchini, B. (2016). "Colloquium: Non-Markovian dynamics in open quantum systems". Reviews of Modern Physics 88 (2): 021002. doi:10.1103/RevModPhys.88.021002. https://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/RevModPhys.88.021002. 


Author: Harold Foppele


Source attribution: Physics:Quantum Non-Markovian dynamics