Abstract
We present a general theory of classical metastability in open quantum systems. Metastability is a consequence of a large separation in timescales in the dynamics, leading to the existence of a regime when states of the system appear stationary, before eventual relaxation toward a true stationary state at much larger times. In this work, we focus on the emergence of classical metastability, i.e., when metastable states of an open quantum system with separation of timescales can be approximated as probabilistic mixtures of a finite number of states. We find that a number of classical features follow from this approximation, for the manifold of metastable states, long-time dynamics between them, and symmetries of the dynamics. Namely, those states are approximately disjoint and thus play the role of metastable phases, the relaxation toward the stationary state is approximated by a classical stochastic dynamics between them, and weak symmetries correspond to their permutations. Importantly, the classical dynamics is observed not only on average but also at the level of individual quantum trajectories: We show that time coarse-grained continuous measurement records can be viewed as noisy classical trajectories, while their statistics can be approximated by that of the classical dynamics. Among others, this explains how first-order dynamical phase transitions arise from metastability. Finally, to verify the presence of classical metastability in a given open quantum system, we develop an efficient numerical approach that delivers the set of metastable phases together with the effective classical dynamics. Since the proximity to a first-order dissipative phase transition manifests as metastability, the theory and tools introduced in this work can be used to investigate such transitions---which occur in the large size limit---through the metastable behavior of many-body systems of moderate sizes accessible to numerics.
Highlights
With continuing advances in the control of experimental platforms used as quantum simulators, such as ultracold atomic gases, Rydberg atoms, and circuit quantumelectrodynamics [1,2,3,4,5,6,7], a broad range of nonequilibrium phenomena of open many-body quantum systems has been observed recently
We focus on the emergence of classical metastability, i.e., when metastable states of an open quantum system with separation of timescales can be approximated as probabilistic mixtures of a finite number of states
Those states are approximately disjoint and play the role of metastable phases, the relaxation toward the stationary state is approximated by a classical stochastic dynamics between them, and weak symmetries correspond to their permutations
Summary
With continuing advances in the control of experimental platforms used as quantum simulators, such as ultracold atomic gases, Rydberg atoms, and circuit quantumelectrodynamics [1,2,3,4,5,6,7], a broad range of nonequilibrium phenomena of open many-body quantum systems has been observed recently. Metastability can emerge in complex relaxation toward a unique stationary state, even without a phase transition present in the thermodynamic limit This is the case in classical kinetically constrained models [43,44,45,46,47,48] and spin glasses [49] and recent open quantum generalizations of the models in Refs. To verify the classicality of metastability present in a general open quantum system and uncover the set of metastable phases together with the effective structure of long-time dynamics, we develop an efficient numerical technique, which can be further simplified when a dynamical symmetry is present. The application of the general methods introduced in this paper to a many-body system beyond this class is given in the accompanying paper [54] which studies in detail the metastability of the open quantum East glass model [50]
Talk to us
Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have
Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.