Abstract

The decay profile of a metastable quantum state decaying in isolation is predicted to depart from exponential behaviour after many lifetimes, and in typical cases to adopt algebraic behaviour as the late-time limit. The effect of environmental interactions, including measurement, is quite different from that of the familiar Zeno (and anti-Zeno) effects that have been observed at very early times. Instead of arresting the decay (or hastening it), the late-time interactions tend to enforce the exponential decay law, without substantially changing the decay constant intrinsic to the isolated system. The experimental challenge is to prevent these interactions and observe the crossover to the nonexponential regime.

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