Abstract

The Time-Fractional Schrödinger Equation (TFSE) is suitable to describe the non-Markovian dynamics of a quantum system exposed to an environment, which is instructive for understanding and characterizing the time behavior of actual physical systems. Three popular TFSEs, namely Naber’s TFSE I, Naber’s TFSE II, and XGF’s TFSE, have been introduced in the form of ∂β∂tβ with β∈0,1. However, they suffer from the drawbacks. In their respective descriptions, the total probability for finding a particle in the entire space equals one only when β=1, implying that time-fractional quantum mechanics violates quantum mechanical probability conservation. By applying the three TFSEs to a basic single-qubit open system model, we discover that in describing the non-Markovian evolution of the system, the three TFSEs are limited by their own applicable ranges of β. This indicates that the three TFSEs cannot effectively describe the non-Markovian quantum dynamics. To address these issues, we introduce a well-performed TFSE by constructing a new analytic continuation of time without iβ combined with the conformable fractional derivative. In its description, for one thing, the total probability for finding the system in any single-qubit state equals one when β∈0,1. For another, the system evolves correctly in the non-Markovian manner at all values of β. Furthermore, we study the performances of the four TFSEs applying to a two-qubit open system model and show that our TFSE still possesses the above two advantages compared with the other three TFSEs.

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