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112 KiB
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3799 lines
112 KiB
Plaintext
The quantum-to-classical transition and decoherence
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Maximilian Schlosshauer
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Department of Physics, University of Portland, 5000 North Willamette Boulevard, Portland, Oregon 97203, USA
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I give a pedagogical overview of decoherence and its role in providing a dynamical account of the
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quantum-to-classical transition. The formalism and concepts of decoherence theory are reviewed,
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followed by a survey of master equations and decoherence models.
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I also discuss methods for
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mitigating decoherence in quantum information processing and describe selected experimental
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investigations of decoherence processes.
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Note: Please see arXiv:1911.06282 [quant-ph] (published as Phys. Rep. 831, 1–57, 2019) for
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a much more extensive and up-to-date review of decoherence.
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CONTENTS
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I. Introduction
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1
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II. Basic formalism and concepts
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2
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A. Decoherence and interference damping
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2
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B. Environmental monitoring and information
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transfer
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3
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C. Environment-induced superselection and
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decoherence-free subspaces
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4
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1. Pointer states and the commutativity
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criterion
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5
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2. Decoherence-free subspaces
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6
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D. Proliferation of information and quantum
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Darwinism
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6
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E. Decoherence versus dissipation and noise
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7
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III. Master equations
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7
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A. Born–Markov master equations
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8
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B. Lindblad master equations
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8
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C. Non-Markovian decoherence
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9
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IV. Decoherence models
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10
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A. Collisional decoherence
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10
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B. Quantum Brownian motion
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11
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C. Spin–boson models
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13
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D. Spin-environment models
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13
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V. Qubit decoherence, quantum error correction,
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and error avoidance
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14
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A. Correction of decoherence-induced quantum
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errors
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14
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B. Quantum computation on decoherence-free
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subspaces
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15
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C. Environment engineering and dynamical
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decoupling
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16
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VI. Experimental studies of decoherence
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16
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A. Atoms in a cavity
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17
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B. Matter-wave interferometry
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17
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C. Superconducting systems
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17
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VII. Decoherence and the foundations of quantum
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mechanics
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19
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References
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19
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I.
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INTRODUCTION
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Realistic quantum systems are never completely iso-
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lated from their environment. When a quantum system
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interacts with its environment, it will in general become
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entangled with a large number of environmental degrees
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of freedom. This entanglement influences what we can
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locally observe upon measuring the system. In partic-
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ular, quantum interference effects with respect to cer-
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tain physical quantities (most notably, “classical” quan-
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tities such as position) become effectively suppressed,
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making them prohibitively difficult to observe in most
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cases of practical interest. This is the process of deco-
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herence, sometimes also called dynamical decoherence or
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environment-induced decoherence [1–10]. Stated in gen-
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eral and interpretation-neutral terms, decoherence de-
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scribes how entangling interactions with the environment
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influence the statistics of results of future measurements
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on the system.
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Formally, decoherence can be viewed as a dynamical
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filter on the space of quantum states, singling out those
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states that, for a given system, can be stably prepared
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and maintained, while effectively excluding most other
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states, in particular, nonclassical superposition states of
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the kind popularized by Schr¨odinger’s cat. In this way,
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decoherence lies at the heart of the quantum-to-classical
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transition. It ensures consistency between quantum and
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classical predictions for systems observed to behave clas-
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sically. It provides a quantitative, dynamical account of
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the boundary between quantum and classical physics. In
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any concrete experimental situation, decoherence theory
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specifies the physical requirements, both qualitative and
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quantitative, for pushing the quantum–classical bound-
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ary toward the quantum realm. Decoherence is a pure
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quantum effect, to be distinguished from classical dissi-
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pation and stochastic fluctuations (noise).
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Decoherence processes are extremely efficient.
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Even
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when the environment does not, from a classical point
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of view, impart significant classical perturbations on the
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system, quantum-mechanically the system will in most
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circumstances become rapidly and strongly entangled
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with the environment. Furthermore, due to the many un-
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controllable degrees of freedom of the environment, such
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entanglement is usually irreversible for all practical pur-
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poses. Increasingly realistic models of decoherence pro-
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arXiv:1404.2635v2 [quant-ph] 20 Nov 2019
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2
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cesses have been developed, progressing from toy models
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to complex models tailored to specific experiments (see
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Sec. IV). Advances in experimental techniques have made
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it possible to observe the gradual action of decoherence
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in experiments such as matter-wave interferometry [11],
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cavity QED [12], and superconducting systems [13] (see
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Sec. VI).
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The superposition states necessary for quantum in-
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formation processing are typically also those most sus-
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ceptible to decoherence. Thus, decoherence is a major
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barrier to implementing devices for quantum informa-
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tion processing such as quantum computers (see Sec. V).
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Qubit systems must be engineered to minimize environ-
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mental interactions detrimental to the preparation and
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longevity of the desired superposition states.
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At the
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same time, they must remain sufficiently open to al-
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low for their control.
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Quantum error correction can
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undo some of the decoherence-induced degradation of
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the superposition state and will be an integral part of
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quantum computers (see Sec. V A). Not only is deco-
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herence relevant to quantum information, but also vice
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versa. An information-centric view of quantum mechan-
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ics proves helpful in conveying the essence of the deco-
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herence process and is also used in recent explorations
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of the role of the environment as an information channel
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(see Sec. II B).
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It is a curious “historical accident” (Joos’s term [14,
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p. 13]) that the role of the environment in quantum me-
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chanics was appreciated only relatively late. While one
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can find—for example, in Heisenberg’s writings [15]—a
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few early anticipatory remarks about the role of environ-
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mental interactions in the quantum-mechanical descrip-
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tion of systems, it wasn’t until the 1970s that the ubiquity
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and implications of environmental entanglement were re-
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alized by Zeh [1, 16]. It took another decade for the for-
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malism of decoherence to be developed, chiefly by Zurek
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[2, 3], and for concrete models and numerical estimates
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of decoherence rates to be worked out [17, 18].
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Review papers on decoherence include Refs. [4–6, 10,
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19].
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There are two books on decoherence:
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a volume
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by Joos et al. [8] (a collection of chapters written by
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different authors) and a monograph by this author [9].
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Ref. [20] also contains material on decoherence. Foun-
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dational implications of decoherence are discussed in
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Refs. [6, 7, 9, 21].
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II.
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BASIC FORMALISM AND CONCEPTS
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In the double-slit experiment, we cannot observe an in-
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terference pattern if we also measure which slit the parti-
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cle went through (that is, if we obtain perfect which-path
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information). In fact, there is a continuous tradeoff be-
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tween interference (phase information) and which-path
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information: the better we can distinguish the two pos-
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sible paths, the less visible the interference pattern be-
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comes [22]. What is more, for a decrease in interference
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visibility to occur it suffices that there are degrees of
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freedom somewhere in the world that, if they were mea-
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sured, would allow us to make, with a certain degree of
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confidence, a statement about the path of the particle
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through the slits.
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While we cannot say that prior to
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their measurement, these degrees of freedom have en-
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coded information about a particular, definitive path of
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the particle—instead, we have merely correlations involv-
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ing both possible paths—no actual measurement is re-
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quired to bring about the decrease in interference visibil-
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ity. It is enough that, in principle, we could make such
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a measurement to obtain which-path information.
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This is somewhat loose talk, and conceptual caveats
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lurk. But it captures quite well the essence of what is
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happening in decoherence, where those “degrees of free-
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dom somewhere in the world” are the degrees of freedom
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of the system’s environment interacting with the system,
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leading to the creation of quantum correlations (entan-
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glement) between system and environment. Decoherence
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can thus be thought of as a process arising from the con-
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tinuous monitoring of the system by the environment;
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effectively, the environment is performing nondemolition
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measurements on the system (see Sec. II B). We now give
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a formal quantum-mechanical account of what we have
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just tried to convey in words, and then flesh out the con-
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sequences and details.
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A.
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Decoherence and interference damping
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Consider again the double-slit experiment and denote
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the quantum states of the particle (call it S, for “sys-
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tem”) corresponding to passage through slit 1 and 2 by
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|s1⟩ and |s2⟩, respectively. Suppose that the particle in-
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teracts with another system E—for example, a detec-
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tor or an environment—such that if the quantum state
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of the particle before the interaction is |s1⟩, then the
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quantum state of E will become |E1⟩ (and similarly for
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|s2⟩), resulting in the final composite states |s1⟩ |E1⟩ and
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|s2⟩ |E2⟩, respectively. For an initial superposition state
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α |s1⟩+β |s2⟩, the final composite state will be entangled,
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|Ψ⟩ = α |s1⟩ |E1⟩ + β |s2⟩ |E2⟩ .
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(1)
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The statistics of all possible local measurements on S
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are exhaustively encoded in the reduced density matrix
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ρS,
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ρS = TrE(ρSE) = TrE|Ψ⟩⟨Ψ|
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= |α|2 |s1⟩⟨s1| + |β|2 |s2⟩⟨s2|
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+ αβ∗|s1⟩⟨s2|⟨E2|E1⟩ + α∗β|s2⟩⟨s1|⟨E1|E2⟩.
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(2)
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For example, suppose we measure particle’s position by
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letting the particle impinge on a distant detection screen.
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Statistically, the resulting particle probability density
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p(x) will be given by
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p(x) = TrS(ρSx)
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= |α|2 |ψ1(x)|2 + |β|2 |ψ2(x)|2
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+ 2 Re {αβ∗ψ1(x)ψ∗
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2(x)⟨E2|E1⟩} ,
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(3)
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3
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where ψi(x) ≡ ⟨x|si⟩. The last term represents the in-
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terference contribution. Thus, the visibility of the inter-
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ference pattern is quantified by the overlap ⟨E2|E1⟩, i.e.,
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by the distinguishability of |E1⟩ and |E2⟩. In the lim-
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iting case of perfect distinguishability, ⟨E2|E1⟩ = 0, no
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interference pattern will be observable and we obtain the
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classical prediction. Phase relations have become locally
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(i.e., with respect to S) inaccessible, and there is no mea-
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surement on S that can reveal coherence between |s1⟩ and
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|s2⟩. The coherence is now between the states |s1⟩ |E1⟩
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and |s2⟩ |E2⟩, requiring an appropriate global measure-
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ment (acting jointly on S and E) for it to be revealed.
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Conversely, if the interaction between S and E is such
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that E is completely unable to resolve the path of the
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particle, then |E1⟩ and |E2⟩ are indistinguishable and full
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coherence is retained at the level of S, as is also directly
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obvious from Eq. (1). In the intermediary regime where
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0 < |⟨E2|E1⟩| < 1, meaning that |E1⟩ and |E2⟩ can be
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distinguished in a one-shot measurement with nonzero
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probability p = 1 − |⟨E2|E1⟩|2 < 1, an interference pat-
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tern of reduced visibility is obtained. Equation (3) shows
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that the reduction in visibility increases as |E1⟩ and |E2⟩
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become more distinguishable.
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Here is another way of putting the matter. Looking
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back at Eq. (1), we see that E encodes which-way infor-
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mation about S in the same “relative-state” sense [23] in
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which EPR correlations [24–26] may be said to encode
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“information.” That is, if ⟨E2|E1⟩ = 0 and we were to
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measure E and found it to be in state |E1⟩, we could, in
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EPR’s words [24, p. 777], “predict with certainty” that
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we will find S in |s1⟩.1 Whenever such a prediction is
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possible were we to measure E, no interference effects be-
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tween the components |s1⟩ and |s2⟩ can be measured at
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S, even if E is never actually measured. If |⟨E2|E1⟩| > 0,
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then E encodes only partial which-way information about
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S, in the sense that a measurement of E could not reliably
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distinguish between |E1⟩ and |E2⟩; instead, sometimes
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the measurement will result in an outcome compatible
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with both |E1⟩ and |E2⟩. Consequently, an interference
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experiment carried out on S would find reduced visibil-
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ity, representing diminished local coherence between the
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components |s1⟩ and |s2⟩.
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As hinted above, the description developed so far de-
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scribes the essence of the decoherence process if we iden-
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tify the particle S more generally with an arbitrary quan-
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tum system and the second system E with the environ-
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ment of S. Then an idealized account of the decoherence
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1 Of course, this must not be read as saying that S was already
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in |s1⟩ (i.e., “went through slit 1”) prior to the measurement
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of E.
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Nor does it mean that the result of a subsequent path
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measurement on S is necessarily determined, by virtue of the
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measurement on E, prior to this S-measurement’s actually be-
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ing carried out. After all, as Peres has cautioned us [27], unper-
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formed measurements have no outcomes. So while the picture
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of E as “encoding which-path information” about S is certainly
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suggestive and helpful, it should be used with an understanding
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of its conceptual pitfalls.
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interaction has form
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��
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i
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ci |si⟩
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�
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|E0⟩
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−→
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�
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i
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ci |si⟩ |Ei(t)⟩ .
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(4)
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We have here introduced a time parameter t, where t = 0
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corresponds to the onset of the environmental interac-
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tion, with |Ei(t)⟩ ≡ |E0⟩ for all i; at t < 0 the system
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and environment are assumed to be uncorrelated (an as-
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sumption common to most decoherence models).
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A single environmental particle interacting with the
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system will typically only insufficiently resolve the com-
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ponents |si⟩ in the system’s superposition state. But be-
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cause of the large number of such particles (and, hence,
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degrees of freedom), the overlap between their different
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joint states |Ei(t)⟩ will rapidly decrease as a result of
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the build-up of many interaction events. Specifically, in
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many decoherence models an exponential decay of over-
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lap is found [3, 5, 9, 17, 20, 28–31],
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⟨Ei(t)|Ej(t)⟩ ∝ e−t/τd
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for i ̸= j.
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(5)
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Here τd is the characteristic decoherence timescale, which
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can be evaluated for particular choices of the parameters
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in each model (see Sec. IV).
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B.
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Environmental monitoring and information
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transfer
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We will now motivate, in a different and more rigorous
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way, the picture of decoherence as a process of environ-
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mental monitoring.
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First, we express the influence of
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the environment in a completely general way.
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We as-
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sume that at t = 0 there are no correlations between
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system S and environment E, ρSE(0) = ρS(0) ⊗ ρE(0).
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We write ρE(0) in its diagonal decomposition, ρE(0) =
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�
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i pi|Ei⟩⟨Ei|, where �
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i pi = 1 and the states |Ei⟩ form
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an orthonormal basis of the Hilbert space of E.
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If
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H denotes the Hamiltonian (here assumed to be time-
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independent) of SE and U(t) = e−iHt represents the uni-
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tary time evolution operator, then the density matrix of
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S evolves according to
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ρS(t) = TrE
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�
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U(t)
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�
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ρS(0) ⊗
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��
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i
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pi|Ei⟩⟨Ei|
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��
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U †(t)
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�
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=
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�
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ij
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pi ⟨Ej| U(t) |Ei⟩ ρS(0) ⟨Ei| U †(t) |Ej⟩ .
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(6)
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Introducing the Kraus operators [32] defined by Eij ≡
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√pi ⟨Ej| U(t) |Ei⟩, we obtain
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ρS(t) =
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�
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ij
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EijρS(0)E†
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ij.
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(7)
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It is customary to combine the two indices i and j into a
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single index and write the Kraus operators as
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Wk ≡ √pik ⟨Ejk| U(t) |Eik⟩ ,
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(8)
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4
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such that
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ρS(t) =
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�
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k
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WkρS(0)W †
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k.
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(9)
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This Kraus-operator formalism (also called operator-sum
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formalism) represents the effect of the environment as
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a sequence of (in general nonunitary) transformations of
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ρS generated by the operators Wk. The Kraus operators
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exhaustively encode information about the initial state
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of the environment and about the dynamics of the joint
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SE system. Because the evolution of SE is unitary, the
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Kraus operators satisfy the completeness constraint
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�
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k
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WkW †
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k = IS,
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(10)
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where IS is the identity operator in the Hilbert space of
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S. Equations (9) and (10) together imply that the Wk are
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the generators of a completely positive map Φ : ρS(0) �→
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ρS, also known as a quantum operation [32] or quantum
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channel.2
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We will now use Eq. (9) to formally motivate the view
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that decoherence corresponds to an indirect measurement
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of the system by the environment, and that it thus re-
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sults from a transfer of information from the system to
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the environment (see also Ref. [19]).
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In such an indi-
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rect measurement, we let the system S interact with a
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probe—here the environment E—followed by a projec-
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tive measurement on E. The probe is treated as a quan-
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tum system. This procedure aims to yield information
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about S without performing a projective (and thus de-
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structive) direct measurement on S. To model such an
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indirect measurement, consider again an initial compos-
|
||
ite density operator ρSE(0) = ρS(0) ⊗ ρE(0) evolving
|
||
under the action of U(t) = e−iHt, where H is the to-
|
||
tal Hamiltonian. Consider a projective measurement M
|
||
on E with eigenvalues α and corresponding projectors
|
||
Pα ≡ |α⟩⟨α|, with P 2
|
||
α = P †
|
||
α = Pα. The probability of
|
||
obtaining outcome α in this measurement when S is de-
|
||
scribed by the density operator ρS(t) is
|
||
|
||
Prob (α | ρS(t)) = TrE (PαρE(t))
|
||
|
||
= TrE
|
||
�
|
||
PαTrS
|
||
�
|
||
U(t) (ρS(0) ⊗ ρE(0)) U †(t)
|
||
��
|
||
.
|
||
(11)
|
||
|
||
The density matrix of S conditioned on the particular
|
||
|
||
2 The Kraus formalism is of limited use in calculating decoherence
|
||
dynamics for concrete situations of physical interest. This is so
|
||
because finding the Kraus operators corresponds to diagonaliz-
|
||
ing the full Hamiltonian of SE, usually a prohibitively difficult
|
||
task.
|
||
Moreover, the Kraus operators contain all contributions
|
||
to the evolution of the reduced density matrix, while for con-
|
||
siderations of decoherence we are typically interested only in
|
||
the nonunitary terms, and certain contributions—such as back-
|
||
action effects from the system on the environment—can often be
|
||
neglected. (This is where master equations come into play; see
|
||
Sec. III.)
|
||
|
||
outcome α is
|
||
|
||
ρ(α)
|
||
S (t) = TrE {[I ⊗ Pα] ρSE(t) [I ⊗ Pα]}
|
||
|
||
Prob (α | ρS(t))
|
||
|
||
= TrE
|
||
�
|
||
[I ⊗ Pα] U(t) [ρS(0) ⊗ ρE(0)] U †(t) [I ⊗ Pα]
|
||
�
|
||
|
||
Prob (α | ρS(t))
|
||
.
|
||
|
||
(12)
|
||
|
||
Inserting
|
||
the
|
||
diagonal
|
||
decomposition
|
||
ρE(0)
|
||
=
|
||
�
|
||
|
||
k pk|Ek⟩⟨Ek|
|
||
and
|
||
carrying
|
||
out
|
||
the
|
||
trace
|
||
gives
|
||
[19]
|
||
|
||
ρ(α)
|
||
S (t) =
|
||
�
|
||
|
||
k
|
||
|
||
Mα,kρS(t)M †
|
||
α,k
|
||
|
||
Prob (α | ρS(t)).
|
||
(13)
|
||
|
||
Here we have introduced the measurement operators
|
||
|
||
Mα,k ≡ √pk ⟨α| U(t) |Ek⟩ ,
|
||
(14)
|
||
|
||
which
|
||
obey
|
||
the
|
||
completeness
|
||
constraint
|
||
�
|
||
|
||
α,k Mα,kM †
|
||
α,k = IS.
|
||
Equation (12) describes the
|
||
effect of the indirect measurement on the state of the
|
||
system. If, however, we do not actually inquire about
|
||
the result of this measurement, we must assign to the
|
||
system a density operator that is a sum over all the
|
||
possible conditional states ρ(α)
|
||
S (t) weighted by their
|
||
probabilities Prob (α | ρS(t)),
|
||
|
||
ρS(t) =
|
||
�
|
||
|
||
α
|
||
Prob (α | ρS(t)) ρ(α)
|
||
S (t)
|
||
|
||
=
|
||
�
|
||
|
||
α,k
|
||
Mα,kρS(t)M †
|
||
α,k.
|
||
(15)
|
||
|
||
Note that this expression is formally analogous to the
|
||
Kraus-operator expression of Eq. (9), which described
|
||
the effect of a general environmental interaction on the
|
||
state of the system. Recall, further, that the situation we
|
||
encounter in decoherence is precisely one in which we do
|
||
not actually read out the environment—or, in the present
|
||
picture, in which we do not inquire about the result of the
|
||
indirect measurement.
|
||
This suggests that decoherence
|
||
can indeed be understood as an indirect measurement—
|
||
a monitoring—of the system by its environment.
|
||
|
||
C.
|
||
Environment-induced superselection and
|
||
decoherence-free subspaces
|
||
|
||
Decoherence can occur in any basis; which observable
|
||
is monitored by the environment depends on the spe-
|
||
cific form of the system–environment interaction. The
|
||
preferred states (or preferred observables) of the system
|
||
emerge dynamically as those states that are the most ro-
|
||
bust to the interaction with the environment, in the sense
|
||
that they become least entangled with the environment;
|
||
thus, they are the states most immune to decoherence.
|
||
|
||
|
||
5
|
||
|
||
This is the stability criterion for the selection of pre-
|
||
ferred states, resulting in the dynamical selection of pre-
|
||
ferred states (“environment-induced superselection”) [1–
|
||
3, 16]. These environment-superselected preferred states
|
||
(or observables) are sometimes also called pointer states
|
||
(or pointer observables) [2], since they correspond to the
|
||
physical quantities that are most easily “read off” at the
|
||
level of the system, akin to the pointer on the dial of a
|
||
measurement apparatus.
|
||
|
||
1.
|
||
Pointer states and the commutativity criterion
|
||
|
||
To find the preferred states,
|
||
we decompose the
|
||
total system–environment Hamiltonian into the self-
|
||
Hamiltonians of the system S and environment E rep-
|
||
resenting the intrinsic dynamics, and a part Hint repre-
|
||
senting the interaction between system and environment,
|
||
|
||
H = HS + HE + Hint.
|
||
(16)
|
||
|
||
In many cases of practical interest, Hint dominates
|
||
the evolution of the system, H ≈ Hint (the quantum-
|
||
measurement limit of decoherence). We look for system
|
||
states |si⟩ such that the composite system–environment
|
||
state, when starting from a product state |si⟩ |E0⟩ at
|
||
t = 0, remains in the product form |si⟩ |Ei(t)⟩ for all
|
||
t > 0 under the action of Hint (we shall assume here
|
||
that Hint is not explicitly time-dependent). That is, we
|
||
demand that (setting ℏ ≡ 1 from here on)
|
||
|
||
e−iHintt |si⟩ |E0⟩ = λi |si⟩ e−iHintt |E0⟩ ≡ |si⟩ |Ei(t)⟩ .
|
||
(17)
|
||
Thus, the pointer states |si⟩ are the eigenstates of the
|
||
part of the interaction Hamiltonian Hint pertaining to the
|
||
Hilbert space of the system, with eigenvalues λi. These
|
||
states will be stationary under Hint [2]. It follows that the
|
||
pointer observable defined by OS = �
|
||
|
||
i oi|si⟩⟨si| com-
|
||
mutes with Hint,
|
||
�
|
||
OS, Hint
|
||
�
|
||
= 0.
|
||
(18)
|
||
|
||
This commutativity criterion [2, 3] is particularly easy to
|
||
apply when Hint takes the tensor-product form Hint =
|
||
S ⊗ E, as is frequently the case. Then the environment-
|
||
superselected observables will be those observables that
|
||
commute with S.
|
||
If S is Hermitian, it represents the
|
||
physical quantity monitored by the environment. In gen-
|
||
eral, any Hint can be written as a diagonal decomposition
|
||
of (unitary but not necessarily Hermitian) system and
|
||
environment operators Sα and Eα, Hint = �
|
||
|
||
α Sα ⊗ Eα.
|
||
If the Sα are Hermitian, such a Hamiltonian represents
|
||
the simultaneous environmental monitoring of different
|
||
observables Sα of the system. A sufficient condition for
|
||
{|si⟩} to form a set of pointer states of the system is then
|
||
given by the requirement that the |si⟩ be simultaneous
|
||
eigenstates of the operators Sα,
|
||
|
||
Sα |si⟩ = λ(α)
|
||
i
|
||
|si⟩
|
||
for all α and i.
|
||
(19)
|
||
|
||
Interaction Hamiltonians frequently describe the scat-
|
||
tering of surrounding particles (photons, air molecules,
|
||
etc.), leading to collisional decoherence (see Sec. IV A).
|
||
Since the force laws describing such processes typically
|
||
depend on some power of distance, the interaction Hamil-
|
||
tonian will then commute with the position operator.
|
||
Thus, the pointer states will be approximate eigenstates
|
||
of position (i.e., narrow position-space wave packets).
|
||
This explains why superpositions of mesoscopically and
|
||
macroscopically distinct positions are prohibitively diffi-
|
||
cult to observe [2, 3, 17, 31, 33–39]. Collisional decoher-
|
||
ence can also be dominant in microscopic systems when
|
||
these systems occur in distinct spatial configurations that
|
||
couple strongly to the surrounding medium. For exam-
|
||
ple, chiral molecules such as sugar are always observed to
|
||
be in chirality eigenstates (left-handed or right-handed),
|
||
which are superpositions of different energy eigenstates.
|
||
Any attempt to prepare such molecules in energy eigen-
|
||
states leads to immediate decoherence into the environ-
|
||
mentally stable chirality eigenstates [40, 41].
|
||
The quantum limit of decoherence [42] arises when the
|
||
modes of the environment are slow in comparison with
|
||
the evolution of the system—that is, when the highest
|
||
frequencies (i.e., energies) available in the environment
|
||
are smaller than the separation between the energy eigen-
|
||
states of the system. Then the environment will be able
|
||
to monitor only quantities that are constants of motion.
|
||
In the case of nondegeneracy, this quantity will be the en-
|
||
ergy of the system, leading to the environment-induced
|
||
superselection of energy eigenstates for the system [42].3
|
||
|
||
In many realistic situations, the commutativity crite-
|
||
rion, Eq. (18), can only be fulfilled approximately [43, 44].
|
||
In addition, the self-Hamiltonian of the system and the
|
||
interaction Hamiltonian may contribute in roughly equal
|
||
strengths (e.g., in models for quantum Brownian motion
|
||
[4, 45]; see Sec. IV B), rendering neither the quantum-
|
||
measurement limit of negligible intrinsic dynamics nor
|
||
the quantum limit of decoherence of a slow environ-
|
||
ment appropriate. In such cases, more general methods
|
||
for determining the preferred states are required. The
|
||
predictability-sieve strategy [43, 44, 46] computes the time
|
||
dependence of the amount of decoherence introduced into
|
||
the system for a large set of initial states of the system
|
||
evolving under the total system–environment Hamilto-
|
||
nian. Typically, this decoherence is measured using ei-
|
||
ther the purity Tr
|
||
�
|
||
ρ2
|
||
S
|
||
�
|
||
or the von Neumann entropy
|
||
|
||
3 Textbooks on quantum mechanics usually attribute a special role
|
||
to such energy eigenstates (for closed systems) since they are
|
||
stationary under the action of the Hamiltonian. In this closed-
|
||
system picture, however, arbitrary superpositions of energy
|
||
eigenstates should nonetheless be perfectly legitimate. Thus, it
|
||
is important to realize that the environment-induced superselec-
|
||
tion of energy eigenstates is not equivalent to a situation in which
|
||
the presence of the environment could be neglected altogether;
|
||
instead, the environment plays the crucial role of continuously
|
||
monitoring the energy of the system, leading to a local suppres-
|
||
sion of coherence between energy eigenstates.
|
||
|
||
|
||
6
|
||
|
||
S(ρS) = −Tr (ρS log2 ρS) of the reduced density matrix
|
||
ρS. The states most immune to decoherence will be those
|
||
which lead to the smallest decrease in purity or the small-
|
||
est increase in von Neumann entropy.
|
||
Application of
|
||
this method leads to a ranking of the possible preferred
|
||
states with respect to their robustness to the interac-
|
||
tion with the environment. For particular models it has
|
||
been explicitly shown that the states picked out by the
|
||
predictability sieve are robust to the particular choice of
|
||
the measure of decoherence. For example, in the model
|
||
for quantum Brownian motion, different measures lead
|
||
to the same minimum-uncertainty wave packets in phase
|
||
space [5, 8, 16, 44, 47, 48].
|
||
|
||
2.
|
||
Decoherence-free subspaces
|
||
|
||
The
|
||
pointer-state
|
||
condition
|
||
of
|
||
Eq.
|
||
(19)
|
||
can
|
||
be
|
||
strengthened to the concept of pointer subspaces [3] or
|
||
decoherence-free subspaces (DFS) [49–58]. These are sub-
|
||
spaces of the Hilbert space of the system in which every
|
||
state in the subspace is immune to decoherence; this is
|
||
a nontrivial requirement, since in general superpositions
|
||
of pointer states will not be pointer states themselves.
|
||
One important condition for this to happen is that the
|
||
preferred states |si⟩ defined by Eq. (19) form an orthonor-
|
||
mal basis of the subspace, and that the eigenvalues λ(α)
|
||
i
|
||
in Eq. (19) are independent of i, i.e., that all |si⟩ are
|
||
simultaneous degenerate eigenstates of each Sα,
|
||
|
||
Sα |si⟩ = λ(α) |si⟩
|
||
for all α and i.
|
||
(20)
|
||
|
||
This condition states that the action of a given Sα must
|
||
be the same for all basis states |si⟩ of the DFS, and thus
|
||
the existence of a DFS corresponds to a symmetry in the
|
||
structure of the system–environment interaction, i.e., to
|
||
a dynamical symmetry. A necessary condition for such a
|
||
symmetry to obtain is the absence of terms in Hint that
|
||
act jointly on system and environment in a nontrivial
|
||
manner.
|
||
An arbitrary state |ψ⟩ in the DFS can then be written
|
||
as |ψ⟩ = �
|
||
|
||
i ci |si⟩ and will evolve according to
|
||
|
||
e−iHintt |ψ⟩ |E0⟩ = |ψ⟩ e−i(
|
||
�
|
||
|
||
α λ(α)Eα)t |E0⟩
|
||
≡ |ψ⟩ |Eψ(t)⟩ .
|
||
(21)
|
||
|
||
Thus, the state |ψ⟩ does not become entangled with the
|
||
environment and is therefore immune to decoherence.
|
||
When the self-Hamiltonian HS of the system cannot be
|
||
neglected, one needs to additionally ensure that none of
|
||
the basis states |si⟩ of the DFS will drift out of the sub-
|
||
space under the evolution generated by HS. Otherwise
|
||
an initially decoherence-free state would again become
|
||
prone to decoherence. The concept of DFS can be gener-
|
||
alized to the formalism of noiseless subsystems (or noise-
|
||
less quantum codes) [58–60].
|
||
|
||
D.
|
||
Proliferation of information and quantum
|
||
Darwinism
|
||
|
||
Quantum Darwinism [61–69] builds on the ideas of de-
|
||
coherence and environmental encoding of information, by
|
||
broadening the role of the environment to that of a com-
|
||
munication and amplification channel. Interactions be-
|
||
tween the system and its environment lead to the redun-
|
||
dant storage of selected information about the system in
|
||
many fragments of the environment. By measuring some
|
||
of these fragments, observers can indirectly obtain infor-
|
||
mation about the system without appreciably disturbing
|
||
the system itself. Indeed, this represents how we typi-
|
||
cally observe objects. For example, we see an object not
|
||
by directly interacting with it, but by intercepting scat-
|
||
tered photons that encode information about the object’s
|
||
spatial structure [67, 68].
|
||
|
||
In this sense, quantum Darwinism provides a dynami-
|
||
cal explanation for the robustness of states of (especially)
|
||
macroscopic objects to observation. It was found that
|
||
the observable of the system that can be imprinted most
|
||
completely and redundantly in many distinct fragments
|
||
of the environment coincides with the pointer observable
|
||
selected by the system–environment interaction [62–65];
|
||
conversely, most other states do not seem to be redun-
|
||
dantly storable. Indeed, it has been shown that the re-
|
||
dundant proliferation of information regarding pointer
|
||
states is as inevitable as decoherence itself [70]. Quantum
|
||
Darwinism has been studied in several concrete models,
|
||
for example, in spin environments [64], quantum Brow-
|
||
nian motion [71], and photon and photon-like environ-
|
||
ments [67, 68, 70]. The efficiency of the amplification pro-
|
||
cess described by quantum Darwinism can be expressed
|
||
in terms of the quantum Chernoff information [70].
|
||
|
||
The structure and amount of information that the
|
||
environment encodes about the system can be quanti-
|
||
fied using the measure of (classical [62, 63] or quantum
|
||
[5, 64, 65]) mutual information. Classical mutual infor-
|
||
mation is based on the choice of particular observables of
|
||
the system S and the environment E and quantifies how
|
||
well one can predict the outcome of a measurement of a
|
||
given observable of S by measuring some observable on
|
||
a fraction of E [62, 63]. Quantum mutual information is
|
||
defined as S(ρS)+S(ρE)−S(ρ), where ρS, ρE, and ρ are
|
||
the density matrices of S, E, and the composite system
|
||
SE, respectively, and S(ρ) = −Tr (ρ log2 ρ) is the von
|
||
Neumann entropy associated with ρ. Quantum mutual
|
||
information quantifies the degree of quantum correlations
|
||
between S and E. Classical and quantum mutual infor-
|
||
mation give similar results [5, 62–65] because the differ-
|
||
ence between the two measures, known as the quantum
|
||
discord [72], disappears when decoherence is sufficiently
|
||
effective to select a well-defined pointer basis [72].
|
||
|
||
|
||
7
|
||
|
||
E.
|
||
Decoherence versus dissipation and noise
|
||
|
||
While the presence of dissipation implies the pres-
|
||
ence of decoherence, the converse is not necessarily true.
|
||
When dissipation and decoherence are both present, they
|
||
typically occur on vastly different timescales; the deco-
|
||
herence timescale is typically many orders of magnitude
|
||
shorter than the relaxation timescale. A rule-of-thumb
|
||
estimate for the ratio of the relaxation timescale τr to the
|
||
decoherence timescale τd for a massive object described
|
||
by a superposition of two different positions a distance
|
||
∆x apart is [18]
|
||
|
||
τr
|
||
τd
|
||
∼
|
||
� ∆x
|
||
|
||
λdB
|
||
|
||
�2
|
||
,
|
||
(22)
|
||
|
||
where λdB = (2mkT)−1/2 is the thermal de Broglie wave-
|
||
length of the object. For an object of mass m = 1 g at
|
||
room temperature in a coherent superposition of two lo-
|
||
cations a distance ∆x = 1 cm apart, τr/τd is on the order
|
||
of 1040. Thus, for macroscopic objects the dissipative in-
|
||
fluence of the environment is usually completely negligi-
|
||
ble on the timescale relevant to the decoherence induced
|
||
by this environment.
|
||
Decoherence is a consequence of environmental entan-
|
||
glement. In the literature on quantum computing, how-
|
||
ever, the term “decoherence” is often used to refer to
|
||
any process that affects the qubits, including perturba-
|
||
tions due to classical fluctuations and imperfections. Ex-
|
||
amples for sources of such classical noise in the context
|
||
of quantum computing are the fluctuations in the inten-
|
||
sity [73] and duration [74] of the laser beam incident on
|
||
qubits in an ion trap, inhomogeneities in the magnetic
|
||
fields in NMR quantum computing [75], and bias fluctu-
|
||
ations in superconducting qubits [76]. The distinction be-
|
||
tween classical noise and quantum decoherence has been
|
||
further blurred in quantum error correction, since the
|
||
error-correcting schemes are insensitive to the physical
|
||
origin of the qubit errors (see Sec. V A).
|
||
Phenomenologically and formally the influence of clas-
|
||
sical noise processes may be described in a manner simi-
|
||
lar to the effect of environmental entanglement, namely,
|
||
in terms of a decay of the off-diagonal elements (in-
|
||
terference terms) in the local density matrix (in the
|
||
environment-superselected basis).
|
||
But in the case of
|
||
noise, the decay of the off-diagonal elements occurs be-
|
||
cause the system’s density matrix is identified with an
|
||
average over a physical ensemble of systems (or, put dif-
|
||
ferently, over the different instances of particular noise
|
||
processes), while in the case of decoherence the decay is
|
||
due to an entanglement-induced delocalization of phase
|
||
coherence for individual systems. The fundamental dif-
|
||
ference between these physical processes is masked by the
|
||
density-matrix description. Indeed, one can always find
|
||
an experimental procedure that would, at least in princi-
|
||
ple, distinguish between the different physical processes
|
||
underlying formally similar density-matrix descriptions.
|
||
In contrast with decoherence, noise does not create
|
||
system–environment entanglement and can in principle
|
||
|
||
always be undone using only local operations (witness,
|
||
for example, the reversal of ensemble dephasing in NMR
|
||
experiments using the spin-echo technique). In any indi-
|
||
vidual realization of the noise process the dynamics of the
|
||
system are completely unitary, and thus no coherence is
|
||
lost from the system. By contrast, if the system becomes
|
||
entangled with environmental degrees of freedom, at the
|
||
very least we would need to perform a pair of measure-
|
||
ments on the environment before and after the interac-
|
||
tion with the system in order to gather enough informa-
|
||
tion to reverse the effect of decoherence by application
|
||
of an appropriate countertransformation. Moreover, as
|
||
also seen experimentally [77], these measurements would
|
||
not always constitute a sufficient procedure for “undo-
|
||
ing” decoherence (see also Sec. IV.C of Ref. [5]).
|
||
The loss of phase coherence due to environmental
|
||
entanglement is sometimes simulated (with the above
|
||
caveats) by classical fluctuations perturbing the system,
|
||
i.e., by the addition of certain time-dependent terms to
|
||
the self-Hamiltonian of the system. This strategy was
|
||
implemented, for example, in theoretical [73, 78] and ex-
|
||
perimental [77, 79] studies of the influence of fluctuating
|
||
parameters in ion-trap quantum computers.
|
||
|
||
III.
|
||
MASTER EQUATIONS
|
||
|
||
In the usual approach to modeling decoherence, the
|
||
reduced density matrix ρS(t) is obtained from
|
||
|
||
ρS(t) = TrE ρSE(t) ≡ TrE
|
||
�
|
||
U(t)ρSE(0)U †(t)
|
||
�
|
||
,
|
||
(23)
|
||
|
||
where U(t) is the time-evolution operator for the compos-
|
||
ite system SE. The task of calculating ρSE(t) is often
|
||
computationally cumbersome or even intractable. It is
|
||
also unnecessarily detailed, because we are usually only
|
||
interested in the dynamics of the system. A master equa-
|
||
tion allows us to calculate ρS(t) directly from an expres-
|
||
sion of the form
|
||
|
||
ρS(t) = V(t)ρS(0),
|
||
(24)
|
||
|
||
where the superoperator V(t) is the dynamical map gen-
|
||
erating the evolution of ρS(t).
|
||
If the master equation
|
||
is exact, then we merely have the identity V(t)ρS(0) ≡
|
||
TrE
|
||
�
|
||
U(t)ρSE(0)U †(t)
|
||
�
|
||
and no computational advantage
|
||
is gained.
|
||
Therefore, master equations are typically
|
||
based on simplifying approximations.
|
||
In modeling decoherence, we focus on master equations
|
||
that are first-order time-local differential equations of the
|
||
form
|
||
|
||
d
|
||
dtρS(t) = L [ρS(t)] ≡ −i [H′
|
||
S, ρS(t)] + D[ρS(t)].
|
||
(25)
|
||
|
||
This equation is local in time in the sense that the change
|
||
of ρS at time t depends only on ρS evaluated at t. The
|
||
superoperator L acting on ρS(t) typically depends on the
|
||
initial state of the environment and the different terms
|
||
in the Hamiltonian.
|
||
We have decomposed L into two
|
||
|
||
|
||
8
|
||
|
||
parts to distinguish their physical interpretation.
|
||
The
|
||
first term, −i [H′
|
||
S, ρS(t)], is unitary and given by the
|
||
Liouville–von Neumann commutator with the “renormal-
|
||
ized” Hamiltonian H′
|
||
S of the system. (Because the en-
|
||
vironment typically leads to a renormalization of the en-
|
||
ergy levels of the system, this Hamiltonian does in general
|
||
not coincide with the unperturbed free Hamiltonian HS
|
||
of S that would generate the evolution of S in absence of
|
||
the environment.) The second, nonunitary term D[ρS(t)]
|
||
represents decoherence (and often also dissipation) due to
|
||
the environment.
|
||
|
||
A.
|
||
Born–Markov master equations
|
||
|
||
Born–Markov master equations allow for many deco-
|
||
herence problems to be treated in a mathematically sim-
|
||
ple, and often closed, form. They are based on the fol-
|
||
lowing two approximations:
|
||
|
||
1. The
|
||
Born
|
||
approximation.
|
||
The
|
||
system–
|
||
environment coupling is sufficiently weak and
|
||
the environment is reasonably large such that
|
||
changes of the density operator ρE of the environ-
|
||
ment are negligible and the system–environment
|
||
density operator remains remains approximately
|
||
factorized at all times, ρSE(t) ≈ ρS(t) ⊗ ρE.
|
||
|
||
2. The Markov approximation. Memory effects of the
|
||
environment are negligible, in the sense that any
|
||
self-correlations within the environment created by
|
||
the coupling to the system decay rapidly compared
|
||
to the characteristic relaxation timescale of the
|
||
open quantum system.
|
||
|
||
Comparisons between the predictions of models based
|
||
on Born–Markov master equations and experimental
|
||
data indicate that the Born and Markov assumptions are
|
||
reasonable in many physical situations (but see Sec. III C
|
||
below for exceptions and non-Markovian models). As-
|
||
suming these assumptions hold and writing the inter-
|
||
action Hamiltonian as Hint = �
|
||
|
||
α Sα ⊗ Eα, the Born–
|
||
Markov master equation reads [9, 20]
|
||
|
||
d
|
||
dtρS(t) = −i [HS, ρS(t)]
|
||
|
||
−
|
||
�
|
||
|
||
α
|
||
{[Sα, BαρS(t)] + [ρS(t)Cα, Sα]} ,
|
||
(26)
|
||
|
||
where the system operators Bα and Cα are defined as
|
||
|
||
Bα ≡
|
||
� ∞
|
||
|
||
0
|
||
dτ
|
||
�
|
||
|
||
β
|
||
cαβ(τ)S(I)
|
||
β (−τ),
|
||
(27a)
|
||
|
||
Cα ≡
|
||
� ∞
|
||
|
||
0
|
||
dτ
|
||
�
|
||
|
||
β
|
||
cβα(−τ)S(I)
|
||
β (−τ).
|
||
(27b)
|
||
|
||
Here S(I)
|
||
α (−τ) denotes the operator Sα in the interaction
|
||
picture. In the following, we will simplify notation by
|
||
|
||
omitting the superscript “I”; instead we use the conven-
|
||
tion that all operators bearing explicit time arguments
|
||
are to be understood as interaction-picture operators.
|
||
(For density operators, however, we will maintain the
|
||
superscript notation in order to distinguish them from
|
||
Schr¨odinger-picture density operators, which also carry
|
||
a time argument.) The quantities cαβ(τ) appearing in
|
||
Eq. (27) are given by
|
||
|
||
cαβ(τ) ≡ ⟨Eα(τ)Eβ⟩ρE .
|
||
(28)
|
||
|
||
These environment self-correlation functions quantify
|
||
how much information the environment retains over time
|
||
about its interaction with the system. The Markov ap-
|
||
proximation corresponds to the assumption of a rapid
|
||
decay of the cαβ(τ) relative to the timescale set by the
|
||
evolution of the system.
|
||
In many situations of interest, the general form of the
|
||
Born–Markov master equation, Eq. (26), simplifies con-
|
||
siderably.
|
||
For example, typically only a single system
|
||
observable S is monitored by the environment, Hint =
|
||
S ⊗E. Also, the time dependence of the operators Sα(τ)
|
||
and Eα(τ) is often simple, facilitating the calculation of
|
||
the quantities Bα and Cα.
|
||
Examples are discussed in
|
||
Sec. IV.
|
||
|
||
B.
|
||
Lindblad master equations
|
||
|
||
Lindblad master equations constitute a particular, al-
|
||
beit quite general, class of time-local Markovian mas-
|
||
ter equations. They arise from the requirement that the
|
||
evolution of the reduced density matrix generated by the
|
||
master equation must ensure complete positivity [20, 80–
|
||
85]. Complete positivity guarantees that the dynamical
|
||
map ρS(0) �→ ρS(t) = V(t)ρS(0) described by the master
|
||
equation generates physically consistent dynamics even
|
||
when S is initially entangled with another system. While
|
||
complete positivity is automatically fulfilled if the evo-
|
||
lution is exact, approximate master equations will not
|
||
necessarily ensure complete positivity [20, 83–86]. The
|
||
Lindblad master equation is a special case of the gen-
|
||
eral Born–Markov master equation that ensures complete
|
||
positivity and takes the general form [81, 82]
|
||
|
||
d
|
||
dtρS(t) = −i [H′
|
||
S, ρS(t)]
|
||
|
||
+ 1
|
||
|
||
2
|
||
|
||
�
|
||
|
||
αβ
|
||
γαβ
|
||
��
|
||
Sα, ρS(t)S†
|
||
β
|
||
�
|
||
+
|
||
�
|
||
SαρS(t), S†
|
||
β
|
||
��
|
||
,
|
||
(29)
|
||
|
||
where H′
|
||
S is the renormalized Hamiltonian of the sys-
|
||
tem. The coefficients γαβ are time-independent and ex-
|
||
haustively encapsulate information about the physical
|
||
parameters of the decoherence processes (and possibly
|
||
dissipation processes).
|
||
One can show that the matrix
|
||
Γ ≡ (γαβ) formed by the coefficients γαβ is positive, i.e.,
|
||
all its eigenvalues κµ are ≥ 0. Therefore, Eq. (29) can be
|
||
|
||
|
||
9
|
||
|
||
simplified by diagonalizing Γ, which results in the diago-
|
||
nal form [82, 87]
|
||
|
||
d
|
||
dtρS(t) = −i [H′
|
||
S, ρS(t)]
|
||
|
||
− 1
|
||
|
||
2
|
||
|
||
�
|
||
|
||
µ
|
||
κµ
|
||
�
|
||
L†
|
||
µLµρS(t) + ρSL†
|
||
µLµ − 2LµρS(t)L†
|
||
µ
|
||
�
|
||
.
|
||
|
||
(30)
|
||
|
||
The Lindblad operators Lµ are linear combinations of the
|
||
original operators Sα, with coefficients determined by the
|
||
diagonalization of Γ. The Lindblad structure of a mas-
|
||
ter equation can also be motivated from the requirement
|
||
that it gives rise to the most general form of generators
|
||
of quantum dynamical semigroups [20, 81, 82, 84, 87–89].
|
||
It is possible to bring any Born–Markov master equation
|
||
into Lindblad form by imposing the rotating-wave ap-
|
||
proximation. This assumption, ubiquituous in quantum
|
||
optics, is justified whenever the timescale set by the typ-
|
||
ical energy differences ℏ(ω − ω′) of the system Hamilto-
|
||
nian is short in comparison with the relaxation timescale
|
||
of the system. (See Sec. 3.3.1 of Ref. [20] for details.)
|
||
Because the Sα are not necessarily Hermitian, the
|
||
Lindblad operators do not always correspond to physical
|
||
observables. But when they do, we can rewrite Eq. (30)
|
||
in compact double-commutator form,
|
||
|
||
d
|
||
dtρS(t) = −i [H′
|
||
S, ρS(t)] − 1
|
||
|
||
2
|
||
|
||
�
|
||
|
||
µ
|
||
κµ [Lµ, [Lµ, ρS(t)]] .
|
||
|
||
(31)
|
||
As an example, consider a situation in which the envi-
|
||
ronment monitors the position of a system. With L = x
|
||
and the “free”-particle Hamiltonian H′
|
||
S = HS = p2/2m,
|
||
Eq. (31) becomes
|
||
|
||
d
|
||
dtρS(t) = − i
|
||
|
||
2m
|
||
�
|
||
p2, ρS(t)
|
||
�
|
||
− 1
|
||
|
||
2κ [x, [x, ρS(t)]] .
|
||
(32)
|
||
|
||
Expressing this master equation in the position represen-
|
||
tation results in
|
||
|
||
∂ρS(x, x′, t)
|
||
|
||
∂t
|
||
= − i
|
||
|
||
2m
|
||
|
||
� ∂2
|
||
|
||
∂x′2 − ∂2
|
||
|
||
∂x2
|
||
|
||
�
|
||
ρS(x, x′, t)
|
||
|
||
− 1
|
||
|
||
2κ (x − x′)2 ρS(x, x′, t).
|
||
(33)
|
||
|
||
This is the classic equation of motion for decoherence due
|
||
to environmental scattering first derived in Ref. [17].
|
||
Lindblad master equations provide an intuitive and
|
||
simple way of representing the environmental monitoring
|
||
of an open quantum system. Most of the real physics be-
|
||
hind this monitoring process is hidden in the coefficients
|
||
κµ appearing in Eq. (30). If the Lindblad operators are
|
||
chosen to be dimensionless, the κµ can be directly in-
|
||
terpreted as decoherence rates, since they have units of
|
||
inverse time.
|
||
Equation (31) shows that the decoherence term van-
|
||
ishes if
|
||
|
||
[Lµ, ρS(t)] = 0
|
||
for all µ, t.
|
||
(34)
|
||
|
||
In this case, ρS(t) evolves unitarily. Since the Lµ are lin-
|
||
ear combinations of the Sα, Eq. (34) typically means that
|
||
[Sα, ρS(t)] = 0 for all α, t. This implies that simultane-
|
||
ous eigenstates of all Sα will be immune to decoherence,
|
||
which is precisely the pointer-state criterion of Eq. (19).
|
||
In quantum-jump and quantum-trajectory approaches,
|
||
the evolution of the reduced density matrix is conditioned
|
||
on an explicitly observed sequence of measurement re-
|
||
sults in the environment. This allows for the (formal)
|
||
description of a single realization of the system evolv-
|
||
ing stochastically, conditioned on a particular measure-
|
||
ment record. The dynamics are then described by a mas-
|
||
ter equation of the Lindblad type, Eq. (31), for the re-
|
||
duced density matrix ρC
|
||
S conditioned on the measurement
|
||
records of the Lindblad operators Lµ,
|
||
|
||
dρC
|
||
S = −i
|
||
�
|
||
HS, ρC
|
||
S
|
||
�
|
||
dt − 1
|
||
|
||
2
|
||
|
||
�
|
||
|
||
µ
|
||
κµ
|
||
�
|
||
Lµ,
|
||
�
|
||
Lµ, ρC
|
||
S
|
||
��
|
||
dt
|
||
|
||
+
|
||
�
|
||
|
||
µ
|
||
|
||
√κµ W[Lµ]ρC
|
||
S dWµ.
|
||
(35)
|
||
|
||
Here, W[L]ρ ≡ Lρ+ρL†−ρ Tr
|
||
�
|
||
Lρ + ρL†�
|
||
, and the dWµ
|
||
denote so-called Wiener increments. Equation (35) corre-
|
||
sponds to a diffusive unraveling of the Lindblad equation
|
||
into individual quantum trajectories, which can then be
|
||
expressed by means of a stochastic Schr¨odinger equation
|
||
[90–102].
|
||
|
||
C.
|
||
Non-Markovian decoherence
|
||
|
||
The derivation of the Born–Markov master equation
|
||
assumes that the coupling between system and environ-
|
||
ment is weak and memory effects of the environment can
|
||
be neglected.
|
||
These conditions, however, are not met
|
||
in certain situations of physical interest.
|
||
An example
|
||
would be a superconducting qubit strongly coupled to a
|
||
low-temperature environment of other two-level systems
|
||
[103, 104]. Also, a recent experiment [105] has measured
|
||
strongly non-Ohmic spectral densities for the environ-
|
||
ment of a quantum nanomechanical system; such densi-
|
||
ties lead to non-Markovian evolution.
|
||
In many cases, pronounced memory effects in the envi-
|
||
ronment will cause strong dependencies of the evolution
|
||
of the reduced density operator on the past history of the
|
||
system–environment composite and therefore make it im-
|
||
possible to describe the reduced dynamics by a differen-
|
||
tial equation that is local in time. Surprisingly, however,
|
||
one can show that even non-Markovian dynamics some-
|
||
times can still be described by a time-local differential
|
||
equation of the form
|
||
|
||
d
|
||
dtρS(t) = K(t)ρS(t),
|
||
(36)
|
||
|
||
where the superoperator K(t) depends only on t.
|
||
For
|
||
example, a non-Markovian master equation for quantum
|
||
Brownian motion (see Sec. IV B) can be obtained through
|
||
|
||
|
||
10
|
||
|
||
a formal modification of the Born–Markov master equa-
|
||
tion [4, 5]. In general, it is often possible to arrive at
|
||
non-Markovian but time-local master equations via the
|
||
so-called time-convolutionless projection operator tech-
|
||
nique [106–109].
|
||
|
||
IV.
|
||
DECOHERENCE MODELS
|
||
|
||
Many physical systems can be represented either by
|
||
a qubit if the state space of the system is discrete and
|
||
effectively two-dimensional, or by a particle described by
|
||
continuous phase-space coordinates. Needless to say, in
|
||
the case of quantum information processing the qubit
|
||
representation is of particular relevance.
|
||
Similarly, a wide range of environments can be modeled
|
||
as a collection of quantum harmonic oscillators or qubits.
|
||
Harmonic-oscillator environments are of great generality.
|
||
At low energies, many systems interacting with an en-
|
||
vironment can effectively be represented by one or two
|
||
coordinates of the system linearly coupled to an environ-
|
||
ment of harmonic oscillators; indeed, sufficiently weak in-
|
||
teractions with an arbitrary environment can be mapped
|
||
onto a system linearly coupled to a harmonic-oscillator
|
||
environment [110, 111].
|
||
Environments represented by qubits are often the ap-
|
||
propriate model in the low-temperature regine, where de-
|
||
coherence is typically dominated by interactions with lo-
|
||
calized modes, such as paramagnetic spins, paramagnetic
|
||
electronic impurities, tunneling charges, defects, and nu-
|
||
clear spins [103, 104, 112]. Each of the localized modes is
|
||
represented by a finite-dimensional Hilbert space with a
|
||
finite energy cutoff. We can therefore model these modes
|
||
as a set of discrete states. Typically, only two such states
|
||
are relevant, and thus the localized modes can be mapped
|
||
onto an environment of qubits. Since qubits can be for-
|
||
mally represented by spin- 1
|
||
|
||
2 particles, such models are
|
||
known as spin-environment models.
|
||
In the following, we will discuss four important stan-
|
||
dard models, namely, collisional decoherence (Sec. IV A),
|
||
quantum Brownian motion (Sec. IV B), the spin–boson
|
||
model (Sec. IV C), and the spin–spin model (Sec. IV D).
|
||
For details on these and other decoherence models, in-
|
||
cluding derivations of the relevant master equations, see
|
||
Secs. 3 and 5 of Ref. [9].
|
||
|
||
A.
|
||
Collisional decoherence
|
||
|
||
Collisional decoherence arises from the scattering of en-
|
||
vironmental particles by a massive free quantum particle.
|
||
Models of collisional decoherence were first studied in the
|
||
classic paper by Joos and Zeh [17]. A more rigorous and
|
||
general treatment was later developed by Hornberger and
|
||
collaborators [31, 36–39] (see also [34, 35, 113]), which,
|
||
among other refinements, remedied a flaw in Joos and
|
||
Zeh’s original derivation that had resulted in decoher-
|
||
ence rates that were too large by a factor of 2π [31].
|
||
|
||
If we assume that the central particle is much more
|
||
massive than the environmental particles such that its
|
||
center-of-mass state is not disturbed by the scattering
|
||
events (no recoil), the time evolution of the reduced den-
|
||
sity matrix is given by [9, 17, 31, 34, 35]
|
||
|
||
∂ρS(x, x′, t)
|
||
|
||
∂t
|
||
= −F(x − x′)ρS(x, x′, t).
|
||
(37)
|
||
|
||
This master equation describes pure spatial decoherence
|
||
without dissipation. The decoherence factor F(x − x′)
|
||
plays the role of a localization rate.
|
||
It represents the
|
||
characteristic decoherence rate at which spatial coher-
|
||
ences between two positions x and x′ become locally sup-
|
||
pressed and is given by
|
||
|
||
F(x − x′) =
|
||
� ∞
|
||
|
||
0
|
||
dq ϱ(q)v(q)
|
||
|
||
×
|
||
� dˆn dˆn′
|
||
|
||
4π
|
||
|
||
�
|
||
1 − eiq(ˆn−ˆn′)·(x−x′)�
|
||
|f(qˆn, qˆn′)|2 .
|
||
(38)
|
||
|
||
Here ϱ(q) denotes the number density of incoming par-
|
||
ticles with magnitude of momentum equal to q = |q|, ˆn
|
||
and ˆn′ are unit vectors (with dˆn and dˆn′ representing the
|
||
associated solid-angle differentials), and v(q) denotes the
|
||
speed of particles with momentum q. For the scattering
|
||
of massive environmental particles we have v(q) = q/m,
|
||
where m is each particle’s mass, while for the scatter-
|
||
ing of photons and other massless particles v(q) is equal
|
||
to the speed of light. The quantity |f(qˆn, qˆn′)|2 is the
|
||
differential cross section for the scattering of an environ-
|
||
mental particle from initial momentum q = qˆn to final
|
||
momentum q′ = qˆn′.
|
||
Whenever the mass of the central particle becomes
|
||
comparable to the mass of the environmental particles (as
|
||
in the case of air molecules scattered by small molecules
|
||
and free electrons [114]), the no-recoil assumption does
|
||
not hold and more general models for collisional deco-
|
||
herence have to be considered [35, 36].
|
||
The resulting
|
||
dynamics include dissipation, as well as decoherence in
|
||
both position and momentum.
|
||
To further evaluate the decoherence factor F(x − x′),
|
||
Eq. (38), we distinguish two important limiting cases. In
|
||
the short-wavelength limit, the typical wavelength of the
|
||
scattered environmental particles is much shorter than
|
||
the coherent separation ∆x = |x − x′| between the well-
|
||
localized wave packets in the spatial superposition state
|
||
of the system.
|
||
Then a single scattering event will be
|
||
able to fully resolve this separation and thus carry away
|
||
complete which-path information, leading to maximum
|
||
spatial decoherence per scattering event. In this limit,
|
||
F(x − x′) turns out to be simply equal to the total scat-
|
||
tering rate Γtot [9]. This implies the existence of an upper
|
||
limit for the decoherence rate when increasing the sepa-
|
||
ration ∆x, in contrast with decoherence rates obtained
|
||
from linear models [compare Eqs. (22) and (54)]. Equa-
|
||
tion (37) then shows that spatial interference terms will
|
||
become exponentially suppressed at a rate set by Γtot,
|
||
|
||
ρS(x, x′, t) = ρS(x, x′, 0)e−Γtott.
|
||
(39)
|
||
|
||
|
||
11
|
||
|
||
TABLE I. Estimates of decoherence timescales (in seconds)
|
||
for the suppression of spatial interferences over a distance ∆x
|
||
equal to the size a of the object (∆x = a = 10−3 cm for a
|
||
dust grain and ∆x = a = 10−6 cm for a large molecule). See
|
||
Ref. [9] for details.
|
||
|
||
Environment
|
||
Dust grain Large molecule
|
||
|
||
Cosmic background radiation
|
||
1
|
||
1024
|
||
|
||
Photons at room temperature
|
||
10−18
|
||
106
|
||
|
||
Best laboratory vacuum
|
||
10−14
|
||
10−2
|
||
|
||
Air at normal pressure
|
||
10−31
|
||
10−19
|
||
|
||
In the opposite long-wavelength limit, the environmen-
|
||
tal wavelengths are much larger than the coherent sep-
|
||
aration ∆x = |x − x′|, which implies that an individual
|
||
scattering event will reveal only incomplete which-path
|
||
information. For this case, one can show that spatial co-
|
||
herences become exponentially suppressed at a rate that
|
||
depends on the square of the separation ∆x [9],
|
||
|
||
ρS(x, x′, t) = ρS(x, x′, 0)e−Λ(∆x)2t,
|
||
(40)
|
||
|
||
where Λ is a scattering constant that encapsulates the
|
||
physical details of the interaction.
|
||
Thus, the quantity
|
||
Λ(∆x)2 plays the role of a decoherence rate.
|
||
The de-
|
||
pendence of this rate on ∆x is reasonable: if the envi-
|
||
ronmental wavelengths are much larger than ∆x, it will
|
||
require a large number of scattering events to encode
|
||
an appreciable amount of which-path information in the
|
||
environment, and this amount will increase, for a given
|
||
number of scattering events, as ∆x becomes larger. Note
|
||
that if ∆x is increased beyond the typical wavelength of
|
||
the environment, the short-wavelength limit needs to be
|
||
considered instead, for which the decoherence rate is in-
|
||
dependent of ∆x and attains its maximum possible value.
|
||
Numerical values of collisional decoherence rates ob-
|
||
tained from Eqs. (39) and (40), with the physically rele-
|
||
vant scattering parameters Γtot and Λ appropriately eval-
|
||
uated, have shown the extreme efficiency of collisions in
|
||
suppressing spatial interferences; Table I shows a few
|
||
classic order-of-magnitude estimates [8, 9, 17].
|
||
Excel-
|
||
lent agreement between theory and experiment has been
|
||
demonstrated for the decoherence of fullerenes due to col-
|
||
lisions with background gas molecules in a Talbot–Lau
|
||
interferometer [31, 115–118] (see Sec. VI B and Fig. 2),
|
||
and for the decoherence of sodium atoms in a Mach–
|
||
Zehnder interferometer due to the scattering of photons
|
||
[119] and gas molecules [120].
|
||
|
||
B.
|
||
Quantum Brownian motion
|
||
|
||
A classic and extensively studied model of decoherence
|
||
and dissipation is the one-dimensional motion of a par-
|
||
ticle weakly coupled to a thermal bath of noninteracting
|
||
harmonic oscillators, a model known as quantum Brown-
|
||
ian motion. The self-Hamiltonian HE of the environment
|
||
|
||
is given by
|
||
|
||
HE =
|
||
�
|
||
|
||
i
|
||
|
||
� 1
|
||
|
||
2mi
|
||
p2
|
||
i + 1
|
||
|
||
2miω2
|
||
i q2
|
||
i
|
||
|
||
�
|
||
,
|
||
(41)
|
||
|
||
where mi and ωi denote the mass and natural frequency
|
||
of the ith oscillator, and qi and pi are the canonical posi-
|
||
tion and momentum operators. The interaction Hamilto-
|
||
nian Hint describes the bilinear coupling of the system’s
|
||
position coordinate x to the positions qi of the environ-
|
||
mental oscillators, Hint = x ⊗ �
|
||
|
||
i ciqi, where the ci de-
|
||
note coupling strengths. This interaction represents the
|
||
continuous environmental monitoring of the position co-
|
||
ordinate of the system.
|
||
The Born–Markov master equation describing the evo-
|
||
lution of the density matrix ρS(t) of the system is given
|
||
by [9, 45]
|
||
|
||
d
|
||
dtρS(t) = −i
|
||
�
|
||
HS, ρS(t)
|
||
�
|
||
|
||
−
|
||
� ∞
|
||
|
||
0
|
||
dτ
|
||
�
|
||
ν(τ)
|
||
�
|
||
x,
|
||
�
|
||
x(−τ), ρS(t)
|
||
��
|
||
|
||
− iη(τ)
|
||
�
|
||
x,
|
||
�
|
||
x(−τ), ρS(t)
|
||
���
|
||
.
|
||
(42)
|
||
|
||
Here, x(τ) denotes the system’s position operator in the
|
||
interaction picture, x(τ) = eiHSτxe−iHSτ.
|
||
The curly
|
||
brackets { · , · } in the second line denote the anticom-
|
||
mutator {A, B} ≡ AB + BA. The functions
|
||
|
||
ν(τ) =
|
||
� ∞
|
||
|
||
0
|
||
dω J(ω) coth
|
||
� ω
|
||
|
||
2kT
|
||
|
||
�
|
||
cos (ωτ) ,
|
||
(43)
|
||
|
||
η(τ) =
|
||
� ∞
|
||
|
||
0
|
||
dω J(ω) sin (ωτ) ,
|
||
(44)
|
||
|
||
are known as the noise kernel and dissipation kernel, re-
|
||
spectively. The function J(ω), called the spectral density
|
||
of the environment, is given by
|
||
|
||
J(ω) ≡
|
||
�
|
||
|
||
i
|
||
|
||
c2
|
||
i
|
||
|
||
2miωi
|
||
δ(ω − ωi).
|
||
(45)
|
||
|
||
In general, spectral densities encapsulate the physi-
|
||
cal properties of the environment.
|
||
One frequently re-
|
||
places the collection of individual environmental oscilla-
|
||
tors by an (often phenomenologically motivated) contin-
|
||
uous function J(ω) of the environmental frequencies ω.
|
||
If we specialize to the important case of the system rep-
|
||
resented by a harmonic oscillator with self-Hamiltonian
|
||
|
||
HS =
|
||
1
|
||
|
||
2M p2 + 1
|
||
|
||
2MΩ2x2,
|
||
(46)
|
||
|
||
the resulting Born–Markov master equation is
|
||
|
||
d
|
||
dtρS(t) = −i
|
||
�
|
||
HS + 1
|
||
|
||
2M �Ω2x2, ρS(t)
|
||
�
|
||
−iγ
|
||
�
|
||
x,
|
||
�
|
||
p, ρS(t)
|
||
��
|
||
|
||
− D
|
||
�
|
||
x,
|
||
�
|
||
x, ρS(t)
|
||
��
|
||
− f
|
||
�
|
||
x,
|
||
�
|
||
p, ρS(t)
|
||
��
|
||
.
|
||
(47)
|
||
|
||
|
||
12
|
||
|
||
The coefficients �Ω2, γ, D, and f are defined as
|
||
|
||
�Ω2 ≡ − 2
|
||
|
||
M
|
||
|
||
� ∞
|
||
|
||
0
|
||
dτ η(τ) cos (Ωτ) ,
|
||
(48a)
|
||
|
||
γ ≡
|
||
1
|
||
|
||
MΩ
|
||
|
||
� ∞
|
||
|
||
0
|
||
dτ η(τ) sin (Ωτ) ,
|
||
(48b)
|
||
|
||
D ≡
|
||
� ∞
|
||
|
||
0
|
||
dτ ν(τ) cos (Ωτ) ,
|
||
(48c)
|
||
|
||
f ≡ − 1
|
||
|
||
MΩ
|
||
|
||
� ∞
|
||
|
||
0
|
||
dτ ν(τ) sin (Ωτ) .
|
||
(48d)
|
||
|
||
The first term on the right-hand side of Eq. (47) repre-
|
||
sents the unitary dynamics of a harmonic oscillator whose
|
||
natural frequency is shifted by �Ω. The second term de-
|
||
scribes momentum damping (dissipation) at a rate pro-
|
||
portional to γ, which depends only on the spectral den-
|
||
sity but not the temperature of the environment. The
|
||
third term is of the Lindblad double-commutator form
|
||
[see Eq. (31)] and describes decoherence of spatial coher-
|
||
ences over a distance ∆X at a rate D(∆X)2. Note that
|
||
D depends on both the spectral density J(ω) and the
|
||
temperature T of the environment. The fourth term also
|
||
represents decoherence, but its influence on the dynam-
|
||
ics of the system is usually negligible, especially at higher
|
||
temperatures. In the long-time limit γt ≫ 1, the master
|
||
equation (47) describes dispersion in position space given
|
||
by
|
||
|
||
∆X2(t) =
|
||
D
|
||
|
||
2m2γ2 t.
|
||
(49)
|
||
|
||
That is, the width ∆X(t) of the ensemble in position
|
||
space asymptotically scales as ∆X(t) ∝
|
||
√
|
||
|
||
t, just as in
|
||
classical Brownian motion; hence the term “quantum
|
||
Brownian motion.”
|
||
Figure 1 shows the time evolution of position-space and
|
||
momentum-space superpositions of two Gaussian wave
|
||
packets in the Wigner picture, as described by Eq. (47)
|
||
[28]. Interference between the two wave packets is rep-
|
||
resented by oscillations between the direct peaks. The
|
||
interaction with the environment damps these oscilla-
|
||
tions.
|
||
The damping occurs on different timescales for
|
||
the two initial conditions. While the momentum coordi-
|
||
nate is not directly monitored by the environment, the
|
||
intrinsic dynamics, through their creation of spatial su-
|
||
perpositions from superpositions of momentum, result
|
||
in decoherence in momentum space.
|
||
This interplay of
|
||
environmental monitoring and intrinsic dynamics leads
|
||
to the emergence of pointer states that are minimum-
|
||
uncertainty Gaussians (coherent states) well-localized in
|
||
both position and momentum, thus approximating clas-
|
||
sical points in phase space [5, 8, 16, 28, 44, 47, 48].
|
||
Let us consider the important case of an ohmic spectral
|
||
density J(ω) ∝ ω with a high-frequency cutoff Λ,
|
||
|
||
J(ω) = 2Mγ0
|
||
|
||
π
|
||
ω
|
||
Λ2
|
||
|
||
Λ2 + ω2 .
|
||
(50)
|
||
|
||
In the limit of a high-temperature environment (kT ≫ Ω
|
||
and kT ≫ Λ), we arrive at the Caldeira–Leggett master
|
||
|
||
x
|
||
|
||
p
|
||
|
||
x
|
||
|
||
p
|
||
|
||
FIG. 1. Evolution of superpositions of Gaussian wave packets
|
||
in quantum Brownian motion as studied in Ref. [28], visual-
|
||
ized in the Wigner representation. Time increases from top
|
||
to bottom. In the left column, the initial wave packets are
|
||
separated in position; in the right column, the separation is
|
||
in momentum.
|
||
|
||
equation [121],
|
||
|
||
d
|
||
dtρS(t) = −i
|
||
�
|
||
H′
|
||
S, ρS(t)
|
||
�
|
||
− iγ0
|
||
�
|
||
x,
|
||
�
|
||
p, ρS(t)
|
||
��
|
||
|
||
− 2Mγ0kT
|
||
�
|
||
x,
|
||
�
|
||
x, ρS(t)
|
||
��
|
||
,
|
||
(51)
|
||
|
||
where
|
||
|
||
H′
|
||
S = HS + 1
|
||
|
||
2M �Ω2x2 =
|
||
1
|
||
|
||
2M p2 + 1
|
||
|
||
2M
|
||
�
|
||
Ω2 − 2γ0Λ
|
||
�
|
||
x2
|
||
|
||
(52)
|
||
is the frequency-shifted Hamiltonian H′
|
||
S of the system.
|
||
This equation has been widely and successfully used to
|
||
model decoherence and dissipation processes, even in
|
||
cases where the assumptions were not strictly fulfilled
|
||
(for example, in quantum-optical settings, where often
|
||
kT ≲ Λ [122]).
|
||
In the position representation, the final term on the
|
||
right-hand side of Eq. (51) can be written as
|
||
|
||
− γ0
|
||
|
||
�x − x′
|
||
|
||
λdB
|
||
|
||
�2
|
||
ρS(x, x′, t),
|
||
(53)
|
||
|
||
where λdB = (2MkT)−1/2 is the thermal de Broglie wave-
|
||
length. This term describes spatial localization with a
|
||
|
||
|
||
13
|
||
|
||
decoherence rate τ −1
|
||
|x−x′| given by [18]
|
||
|
||
τ −1
|
||
|x−x′| = γ0
|
||
|
||
�x − x′
|
||
|
||
λdB
|
||
|
||
�2
|
||
.
|
||
(54)
|
||
|
||
This is Eq. (22), and as discussed there, given that λdB is
|
||
extremely small for macroscopic and even mesoscopic ob-
|
||
jects, we see that superpositions of macroscopically sepa-
|
||
rated center-of-mass positions will typically be decohered
|
||
on timescales many orders of magnitude shorter than the
|
||
dissipation (relaxation) timescale γ−1
|
||
0 . Over timescales
|
||
on the order of the decoherence time, we may therefore
|
||
often neglect the dissipative term in Eq. (51), leading to
|
||
the pure-decoherence master equation
|
||
|
||
d
|
||
dtρS(t) = −i
|
||
�
|
||
H′
|
||
S, ρS(t)
|
||
�
|
||
− 2Mγ0kT
|
||
�
|
||
x,
|
||
�
|
||
x, ρS(t)
|
||
��
|
||
. (55)
|
||
|
||
C.
|
||
Spin–boson models
|
||
|
||
In the spin–boson model, a qubit interacts with an
|
||
environment of harmonic oscillators. The seminal review
|
||
paper by Leggett et al. [29] discusses the dynamics of the
|
||
spin–boson model in great detail.
|
||
Let us first consider a simplified spin–boson model
|
||
where the self-Hamiltonian of the system is taken to be
|
||
HS = 1
|
||
|
||
2ω0σz, with eigenstates |0⟩ and |1⟩. In contrast
|
||
with the more general case discussed below, this Hamilto-
|
||
nian does not include a tunneling term − 1
|
||
|
||
2∆0σx, and thus
|
||
HS does not generate any nontrivial intrinsic dynamics.
|
||
We employ the familiar self-Hamiltonian, Eq. (41), for
|
||
an environment of harmonic oscillators, and choose the
|
||
bilinear interaction Hamiltonian Hint = σz ⊗�
|
||
|
||
i ciqi. Us-
|
||
ing the raising and lowering operators a† and a, we can
|
||
recast the total Hamiltonian as
|
||
|
||
H = 1
|
||
|
||
2ω0σz +
|
||
�
|
||
|
||
i
|
||
ωia†
|
||
iai + σz ⊗
|
||
�
|
||
|
||
i
|
||
|
||
�
|
||
gia†
|
||
i + g∗
|
||
i ai
|
||
�
|
||
. (56)
|
||
|
||
Note that since
|
||
�
|
||
H, σz
|
||
�
|
||
= 0, no transitions between |0⟩
|
||
and |1⟩ can be induced by H. There is no energy ex-
|
||
change between the system and the environment, and we
|
||
therefore deal with a model of decoherence without dis-
|
||
sipation. Such a model is a good representation of rapid
|
||
decoherence processes during which the amount of dissi-
|
||
pation is negligible, as is often the case in physical appli-
|
||
cations. The resulting evolution can be solved exactly [9].
|
||
For an ohmic spectral density with a high-frequency cut-
|
||
off, it is found that superpositions of the form α |0⟩+β |1⟩
|
||
are exponentially decohered on a timescale set by the
|
||
thermal correlation time (kT)−1 of the environment.
|
||
Inclusion of a tunneling term − 1
|
||
|
||
2∆0σx yields the gen-
|
||
eral spin–boson model defined by the Hamiltonian
|
||
|
||
H = 1
|
||
|
||
2ω0σz − 1
|
||
|
||
2∆0σx +
|
||
�
|
||
|
||
i
|
||
|
||
� 1
|
||
|
||
2mi
|
||
p2
|
||
i + 1
|
||
|
||
2miω2
|
||
i q2
|
||
i
|
||
|
||
�
|
||
|
||
+ σz ⊗
|
||
�
|
||
|
||
i
|
||
ciqi.
|
||
(57)
|
||
|
||
The rich non-Markovian dynamics of this model have
|
||
been analyzed in Refs. [29, 123]. The particular dynamics
|
||
strongly depend on the various parameters, such as the
|
||
temperature of the environment, the form of the spec-
|
||
tral density (subohmic, ohmic, or supraohmic), and the
|
||
system–environment coupling strength. For each param-
|
||
eter regime, a characteristic dynamical behavior emerges:
|
||
localization, exponential or incoherent relaxation, expo-
|
||
nential decay, and strongly or weakly damped coherent
|
||
oscillations [29].
|
||
In the weak-coupling limit, one can derive the Born–
|
||
Markov master equation in much the same way as in
|
||
the case of quantum Brownian motion (note the similar
|
||
structure of the Hamiltonians). The result is (see Ref. [9]
|
||
for details)
|
||
|
||
d
|
||
dtρS(t) = −i
|
||
�
|
||
H′
|
||
SρS(t) − ρS(t)H′†
|
||
S
|
||
�
|
||
|
||
− �D [σz, [σz, ρS(t)]] + ζσzρS(t)σy + ζ∗σyρS(t)σz.
|
||
(58)
|
||
|
||
The first term on the right-hand side of the master equa-
|
||
tion (58) represents the evolution under the environment-
|
||
shifted self-Hamiltonian H′
|
||
S, the second term corre-
|
||
sponds to decoherence in the σz eigenbasis of the system
|
||
at a rate given by �D, and the last two terms describe
|
||
the decay of the two-level system. H′
|
||
S is the renormal-
|
||
ized (and in general non-Hermitian) Hamiltonian of the
|
||
system. The coefficients ζ∗, �D, �f, and �γ are given by
|
||
|
||
ζ∗ = �f − i�γ,
|
||
(59a)
|
||
|
||
�D =
|
||
� ∞
|
||
|
||
0
|
||
dτ ν(τ) cos (∆0τ) ,
|
||
(59b)
|
||
|
||
�f =
|
||
� ∞
|
||
|
||
0
|
||
dτ ν(τ) sin (∆0τ) ,
|
||
(59c)
|
||
|
||
�γ =
|
||
� ∞
|
||
|
||
0
|
||
dτ η(τ) sin (∆0τ) ,
|
||
(59d)
|
||
|
||
with the noise and the dissipation kernels ν(τ) and η(τ)
|
||
taking the same form as in quantum Brownian motion
|
||
[see Eqs. (43) and (44)].
|
||
|
||
D.
|
||
Spin-environment models
|
||
|
||
A qubit linearly coupled to a collection of other
|
||
qubits—known also as a spin–spin model—is often a good
|
||
model of a single two-level system, such as a supercon-
|
||
ducting qubit, strongly coupled to a low-temperature en-
|
||
vironment [103, 104].
|
||
The model of a harmonic oscil-
|
||
lator interacting with a spin environment may be rele-
|
||
vant to the description of decoherence and dissipation in
|
||
quantum-nanomechanical systems and micron-scale ion
|
||
traps [124]. For details on the theory of spin-environment
|
||
models, see Refs. [104, 125–127].
|
||
A simple version of a spin–spin model is described by
|
||
|
||
|
||
14
|
||
|
||
the total Hamiltonian
|
||
|
||
H = HS + Hint = −1
|
||
|
||
2∆0σx + 1
|
||
|
||
2σz ⊗
|
||
|
||
N
|
||
�
|
||
|
||
i=1
|
||
giσ(i)
|
||
z
|
||
|
||
≡ −1
|
||
|
||
2∆0σx + 1
|
||
|
||
2σz ⊗ E.
|
||
(60)
|
||
|
||
Here, HS represents the intrinsic dynamics given by a
|
||
tunneling term, while Hint describes the environmental
|
||
monitoring of the observable σz.
|
||
The model can be solved exactly [128, 129], and
|
||
the resulting dynamics illustrate the dependence of the
|
||
preferred basis on the relative strengths of the self-
|
||
Hamiltonian of the system and the interaction Hamil-
|
||
tonian.
|
||
The preferred basis emerges as the local ba-
|
||
sis that is most robust under the total Hamiltonian.
|
||
When the interaction Hamiltonian dominates over the
|
||
self-Hamiltonian, the pointer states are found to be eigen-
|
||
states of the interaction Hamiltonian, in agreement with
|
||
the commutativity criterion, Eq. (18). Conversely, when
|
||
the modes of the environment are slow and the self-
|
||
Hamiltonian dominates the evolution of the system (the
|
||
quantum limit of decoherence [42]), the pointer states are
|
||
the eigenstates of the Hamiltonian of the system.
|
||
In the weak-coupling limit, spin environments can be
|
||
mapped onto oscillator environments [110, 130]. Specifi-
|
||
cally, the reduced dynamics of a system weakly coupled
|
||
to a spin environment can be described by the system
|
||
coupled to an equivalent oscillator environment described
|
||
by an explicitly temperature-dependent spectral density
|
||
of the form
|
||
|
||
Jeff(ω, T) ≡ J(ω) tanh
|
||
� ω
|
||
|
||
2kT
|
||
|
||
�
|
||
,
|
||
(61)
|
||
|
||
where J(ω) is the original spectral density of the spin
|
||
environment. (See Sec. 5.4.2 of Ref. [9] for details and
|
||
examples.)
|
||
|
||
V.
|
||
QUBIT DECOHERENCE, QUANTUM
|
||
ERROR CORRECTION, AND ERROR
|
||
AVOIDANCE
|
||
|
||
Quantum computation and quantum information pro-
|
||
cessing rely on coherent superpositions of mesoscopically
|
||
or macroscopically distinct states that are highly suscep-
|
||
tible to decoherence. Avoiding, controlling, and mitigat-
|
||
ing decoherence is therefore of paramount importance.
|
||
While the qubits need to be protected from detrimental
|
||
environmental interactions, we also need to be able to
|
||
control and measure them via a macroscopic apparatus.
|
||
The formidable challenge of designing a quantum com-
|
||
puter consists of meeting both demands in a balanced
|
||
way. Even so, decoherence induced by interactions with
|
||
the environment and the control apparatus, as well as
|
||
noise due to faulty gate operations, will likely be too
|
||
strong to allow for useful quantum computations to be
|
||
carried out [74, 131]. What is also needed is an active
|
||
|
||
mitigation of the effects of decoherence through active
|
||
quantum error correction [132–136].
|
||
We may distinguish two limiting cases for modeling
|
||
decoherence in qubits. The first limit is that of indepen-
|
||
dent qubit decoherence. Here, each qubit couples indepen-
|
||
dently to its own environment, without any interactions
|
||
between these environments. For example, this may be
|
||
the case if the qubits are spatially well-separated (rela-
|
||
tive to the typical coherence length of the environment)
|
||
and only couple to their immediate surroundings. Then
|
||
the error processes affecting the qubits will be completely
|
||
uncorrelated. Thus, if the probability of a particular er-
|
||
ror to affect one qubit is p, the probability of this error
|
||
to occur in K qubits will be pK. Many error-correcting
|
||
schemes are only efficient in correcting such single-qubit
|
||
errors, and thus the assumption of independent decoher-
|
||
ence frequently underlies these schemes. This assump-
|
||
tion, however, is unrealistic when the qubits are located
|
||
spatially close to each other. In this case, all qubits ap-
|
||
proximately feel the same environment, and it is likely
|
||
that errors will become correlated among multiple qubits.
|
||
The limiting case corresponding to this situation is that
|
||
of collective qubit decoherence, in which all qubits couple
|
||
to exactly the same environment.
|
||
|
||
A.
|
||
Correction of decoherence-induced quantum
|
||
errors
|
||
|
||
Consider a single qubit S, initially described by a pure
|
||
state |ψ⟩ and interacting with an environment E. One
|
||
can show that an arbitrary evolution of the combined
|
||
qubit–environment state can always be written in the
|
||
form
|
||
|
||
|ψ⟩ |e0⟩ −→ I |ψ⟩ |eI⟩ +
|
||
�
|
||
|
||
s=x,y,z
|
||
(σs |ψ⟩) |es⟩ ,
|
||
(62)
|
||
|
||
where the Pauli operators σs act on the Hilbert space of
|
||
S, and |eI⟩ and {|es⟩} are environmental states that are
|
||
not necessarily orthogonal or normalized. Thus, any in-
|
||
fluence of the environment on the qubit can be expressed
|
||
simply in terms of a weighted sum of the Pauli operators
|
||
and the identity operator acting on the original state of
|
||
the qubit. The effects of σx and σz on the qubit state are
|
||
often referred as a bit-flip error and phase-flip error, re-
|
||
spectively. If we restrict our attention to environmental
|
||
entanglement and the resulting decoherence effects, then
|
||
only phase-flip errors need to be taken into account.
|
||
For N qubits, Eq. (62) generalizes to
|
||
|
||
|ψ⟩ |e0⟩ −→
|
||
�
|
||
|
||
i
|
||
(Ei |ψ⟩) |ei⟩ .
|
||
(63)
|
||
|
||
Here |ψ⟩ is the initial N-qubit state, and the error op-
|
||
erators Ei are tensor products of N operators involv-
|
||
ing identity and Pauli operators. Equation (63) repre-
|
||
sents a worst-case scenario.
|
||
In many cases, simplified
|
||
versions can be used. One important case is that of par-
|
||
tial decoherence. Here, only a small number K < N of
|
||
|
||
|
||
15
|
||
|
||
qubits become entangled with the environment between
|
||
two successive applications of an error-correcting mech-
|
||
anism. Then it will be sufficient to restrict our attention
|
||
to the 2K possible error operators made up of at most K
|
||
operators σz and N − K identity operators. In the case
|
||
of independent qubit decoherence, we only need to con-
|
||
sider a collection of independent phase-flip errors acting
|
||
on single qubits, represented by error operators of the
|
||
form E = I ⊗ · · · ⊗ I ⊗ σz ⊗ I ⊗ · · · ⊗ I.
|
||
Given the entangled state on the right-hand side of
|
||
Eq. (63), the goal of quantum error correction is to re-
|
||
store the initial (unknown) state |ψ⟩. We let an ancilla,
|
||
described by an initial state |a0⟩, interact with the qubit
|
||
system such that
|
||
|
||
|a0⟩
|
||
|
||
��
|
||
|
||
i
|
||
(Ei |ψ⟩) |ei⟩
|
||
|
||
�
|
||
|
||
−→
|
||
�
|
||
|
||
i
|
||
|ai⟩ (Ei |ψ⟩) |ei⟩ .
|
||
(64)
|
||
|
||
Let us assume that the ancilla states |ai⟩ are at least
|
||
approximately mutually orthogonal, such that they can
|
||
be distinguished by measurement. We now measure the
|
||
observable OA = �
|
||
|
||
i ai|ai⟩⟨ai| on the ancilla, with ai ̸=
|
||
aj for i ̸= j. The projective measurement will yield a
|
||
particular outcome, say, ak, and lead to the reduction of
|
||
the entangled state,
|
||
�
|
||
|
||
i
|
||
|ai⟩ (Ei |ψ⟩) |ei⟩ −→ |ak⟩ (Ek |ψ⟩) |ek⟩ .
|
||
(65)
|
||
|
||
The outcome ak of the measurement tells us the counter-
|
||
transformation needed to restore the initial qubit state.
|
||
Applying E−1
|
||
k
|
||
= E†
|
||
k to the system gives
|
||
|
||
|ak⟩ (Ek |ψ⟩) |ek⟩
|
||
E−1
|
||
k
|
||
−−−→ |ak⟩ |ψ⟩ |ek⟩ .
|
||
(66)
|
||
|
||
Note that, as required in order to avoid introducing ad-
|
||
ditional decoherence in the computational basis of the
|
||
qubit system, we have obtained no information whatso-
|
||
ever about the state of the system.
|
||
This account of quantum error correction has been
|
||
highly idealized.
|
||
Let us mention three complications.
|
||
First, it is impossible to design an interaction between
|
||
the computational qubits and the ancilla that would al-
|
||
low us to distinguish, by measuring the ancilla, between
|
||
all possible errors. Second, in realistic settings the error
|
||
operators Ei may be very complex, and it remains to be
|
||
seen whether and how the corresponding countertrans-
|
||
formations can be applied without introducing signifi-
|
||
cant additional decoherence.
|
||
Third, the ancilla qubits
|
||
are physically similar to the computational qubits and
|
||
can therefore be expected to be equally prone to en-
|
||
vironmental interactions (and thus decoherence) as the
|
||
computational qubits themselves. Since the inclusion of
|
||
ancilla qubits increases the total number of qubits in the
|
||
quantum computer, and since decoherence rates typically
|
||
scale exponentially with the size of the system, it will re-
|
||
quire sophisticated experimental designs to ensure not
|
||
only that quantum error correction works in practice,
|
||
but also that it does not aggravate the problem of qubit
|
||
decoherence.
|
||
|
||
B.
|
||
Quantum computation on decoherence-free
|
||
subspaces
|
||
|
||
We introduced the concept of decoherence-free sub-
|
||
spaces (DFS) [49–58],
|
||
or pointer subspaces [3],
|
||
in
|
||
Sec. II C 2. DFS allow us to encode quantum informa-
|
||
tion in “quiet corners” of the Hilbert space to protect
|
||
it from environmental effects. In contrast with quantum
|
||
error correction, DFS prevent errors from happening in
|
||
the first place and thus represent a strategy for intrinsic
|
||
error avoidance.
|
||
The two limiting cases of independent qubit decoher-
|
||
ence and collective qubit decoherence delineate the lim-
|
||
its on the size of a DFS. To illustrate this relation-
|
||
ship, let us consider the case of collective decoherence
|
||
of an N-qubit system interacting with an oscillator bath
|
||
[49, 51, 53, 56, 137].
|
||
The interaction Hamiltonian for
|
||
this generalized spin–boson model is taken to be [com-
|
||
pare Eq. (56)]
|
||
|
||
Hint =
|
||
|
||
N
|
||
�
|
||
|
||
i=1
|
||
σ(i)
|
||
z
|
||
⊗
|
||
�
|
||
|
||
j
|
||
|
||
�
|
||
gija†
|
||
j + g∗
|
||
ijaj
|
||
�
|
||
≡
|
||
|
||
N
|
||
�
|
||
|
||
i=1
|
||
σ(i)
|
||
z
|
||
⊗ Ei.
|
||
|
||
(67)
|
||
The assumption of collective decoherence implies that
|
||
the couplings gij (and thus the environment operators
|
||
Ei) must be independent of the index i. Then Eq. (67)
|
||
becomes
|
||
|
||
Hint =
|
||
|
||
��
|
||
|
||
i
|
||
σ(i)
|
||
z
|
||
|
||
�
|
||
|
||
⊗ E ≡ Sz ⊗ E.
|
||
(68)
|
||
|
||
Recall that a DFS is spanned by a degenerate set of
|
||
eigenstates of the system operators Sα of the interaction
|
||
Hamiltonian [see Eq. (20)]. Thus, in our case the DFS
|
||
will be spanned by degenerate eigenstates of the collec-
|
||
tive spin operator Sz. Any N-qubit product state of the
|
||
computational basis states |0⟩ and |1⟩ (the eigenstates of
|
||
σz with eigenvalues +1 and −1, respectively) will be an
|
||
eigenstate of Sz. There are 2N +1 different possible inte-
|
||
ger eigenvalues m, ranging from m = −N (corresponding
|
||
to the basis state |1 · · · 1⟩) to m = +N (corresponding
|
||
to |0 · · · 0⟩). The largest number of mutually orthogonal
|
||
computational-basis states with the same eigenvalue m
|
||
of Sz is given by the set S0 of basis states with m = 0,
|
||
i.e., those with N/2 qubits in the state |0⟩. There are
|
||
n0 =
|
||
� N
|
||
N/2
|
||
�
|
||
such states in this set, spanning a DFS of di-
|
||
mension n0. For large values of N, we can approximate
|
||
the binomial coefficient using Stirling’s formula,
|
||
|
||
log2
|
||
|
||
� N
|
||
N/2
|
||
|
||
�
|
||
≈ N − 1
|
||
|
||
2 log2(πN/2)
|
||
N≫1
|
||
−−−→ N.
|
||
(69)
|
||
|
||
Therefore, in the limiting case of collective decoherence,
|
||
the dimension of our DFS approaches the dimension of
|
||
the original Hilbert space, and the encoding efficiency
|
||
approaches unity. For example, for N = 4 qubits, the set
|
||
|
||
S0 = { |0011⟩ , |0101⟩ , |0110⟩ , |1001⟩ , |1010⟩ , |1100⟩ }
|
||
(70)
|
||
|
||
|
||
16
|
||
|
||
spans a maximum-size DFS of dimension six, to be com-
|
||
pared with the dimension of the original Hilbert space,
|
||
which is 24 = 16. Thus, given the model for collective de-
|
||
coherence considered here, using four physical qubits we
|
||
can encode up to two logical qubits in a DFS (since en-
|
||
coding three logical qubits would already require a DFS
|
||
of dimension 23 = 8).
|
||
As mentioned in Sec. II C 2, the existence of a DFS
|
||
corresponds to a dynamical symmetry. Our model rep-
|
||
resents a case of perfect dynamical symmetry, since
|
||
the system–environment interaction, Eq. (68), is com-
|
||
pletely symmetric with respect to any permutations of
|
||
the qubits, thereby leading to a DFS of maximum size.
|
||
What happens if the symmetry is broken by additional
|
||
small independent coupling terms? It has been shown
|
||
[50, 138] that, to first order in the perturbation strength,
|
||
the storage of quantum information in DFS is stable to
|
||
such perturbations to all orders in time, but that the pro-
|
||
cessing of such quantum information encoded in DFS is
|
||
robust only to first order in time.
|
||
In the case of purely independent qubit decoherence,
|
||
the environment operators Ei appearing in Eq. (67) will
|
||
now differ from one another. To find a DFS, we follow
|
||
the usual strategy [see Eq. (20)] of determining a set of
|
||
orthonormal basis states {|si⟩} such that
|
||
|
||
�
|
||
I(1) ⊗ · · · ⊗ I(j−1) ⊗ σ(j)
|
||
z
|
||
⊗ I(j+1) ⊗ · · · ⊗ I(N)�
|
||
|si⟩
|
||
|
||
= λ(j) |si⟩
|
||
(71)
|
||
|
||
for all i and 1 ≤ j ≤ N. The only state fulfilling this
|
||
eigenvalue problem is |0 · · · 0⟩.
|
||
Since we need at least
|
||
a two-dimensional subspace to encode a single logical
|
||
qubit, the case of independent decoherence in the spin–
|
||
boson model does not allow for the existence of a DFS for
|
||
quantum computation. In the language of pointer sub-
|
||
spaces, there is only a single exact pointer state, and this
|
||
environment-superselected preferred state of the system
|
||
will be the ground state |0 · · · 0⟩.
|
||
In realistic settings, neither the assumption of purely
|
||
independent decoherence nor the limit of entirely collec-
|
||
tive decoherence will be entirely appropriate. We can,
|
||
however, use a DFS to protect the qubits from collective
|
||
decoherence effects, and we can recover from single-qubit
|
||
errors due to independent decoherence using active error-
|
||
correction methods. These two approaches can be con-
|
||
catenated [54] to enable universal fault-tolerant quantum
|
||
computation even when the restriction to single-qubit er-
|
||
rors is dropped [55, 139].
|
||
|
||
C.
|
||
Environment engineering and dynamical
|
||
decoupling
|
||
|
||
For reasonably large DFS to exist,
|
||
the system–
|
||
environment interaction must exhibit a sufficiently high
|
||
degree of symmetry.
|
||
Such symmetries are unlikely to
|
||
arise naturally in typical experimental settings.
|
||
|
||
One way of overcoming this limitation is based on envi-
|
||
ronment engineering. Here, one tries to generate certain
|
||
symmetries in the structure of the system–environment
|
||
interactions. For example, an appropriately engineered
|
||
symmetrization could make superposition states in Bose–
|
||
Einstein condensates correspond to (approximate) de-
|
||
generate eigenstates of the interaction Hamiltonian, in
|
||
which case such states would lie within a DFS, thereby
|
||
significantly enhancing their longevity [140].
|
||
In ion
|
||
traps, changing the parameters in the effective interac-
|
||
tion Hamiltonian for the trapped ion allows one to se-
|
||
lect different pointer subspaces and thereby control into
|
||
which DFS the trapped ion is driven [77, 79, 141, 142].
|
||
Another approach to the active creation of DFS is
|
||
known as dynamical decoupling [143–148].
|
||
Here time-
|
||
dependent modifications are introduced into the Hamil-
|
||
tonian of the system that counteract the influence of
|
||
the environment. These modifications take the form of
|
||
sequences of rapid projective measurements or strong
|
||
control-field pulses acting on the system (“quantum
|
||
bang-bang control” [143]).
|
||
Even if the structure of
|
||
the system–environment interaction Hamiltonian is not
|
||
known, decoherence can be suppressed arbitrarily well
|
||
in the limit of an infinitely fast rate of the decoupling
|
||
control field, thus dynamically creating a DFS (which
|
||
then represents a dynamically decoupled subspace). In
|
||
the realistic case of a finite control rate, sufficient (albeit
|
||
imperfect) protection from decoherence can be achieved
|
||
via this decoupling technique, provided the control rate
|
||
is larger than the fastest timescale set by the rate of for-
|
||
mation of environmental entanglement.
|
||
|
||
VI.
|
||
EXPERIMENTAL STUDIES OF
|
||
DECOHERENCE
|
||
|
||
Decoherence, of course, happens all around us, and
|
||
in this sense its consequences are readily observed. But
|
||
what we would like to do is to be able to experimen-
|
||
tally study the gradual and controlled action of deco-
|
||
herence. In this endeavor, several obstacles have to be
|
||
overcome. We need to prepare the system in a superpo-
|
||
sition of mesoscopically or even macroscopically distin-
|
||
guishable states with a sufficiently long decoherence time
|
||
such that the gradual action of decoherence can be re-
|
||
solved. We must be able to monitor decoherence without
|
||
introducing a significant amount of additional, unwanted
|
||
decoherence. We would also like to have sufficient con-
|
||
trol over the environment so we can tune the strength
|
||
and form of its interaction with the system.
|
||
Starting
|
||
in the mid-1990s, several such experiments have been
|
||
performed, for example, using cavity QED [12], meso-
|
||
scopic molecules [149], and superconducting systems such
|
||
as SQUIDs and Cooper-pair boxes [13]. Bose–Einstein
|
||
condensates [150] and quantum nanomechanical systems
|
||
[151, 152] are promising candidates for future experimen-
|
||
tal tests of decoherence.
|
||
These experiments are important for several reasons.
|
||
|
||
|
||
17
|
||
|
||
They are impressive demonstrations of the possibility
|
||
of generating nonclassical quantum states in mesoscopic
|
||
and macroscopic systems. They show that the quantum–
|
||
classical boundary is smooth and can be shifted by vary-
|
||
ing the relevant experimental parameters.
|
||
They allow
|
||
us to test and improve decoherence models, and they
|
||
help us design devices for quantum information process-
|
||
ing that are good at evading the detrimental influence
|
||
of the environment. Finally, such experiments may be
|
||
used to test quantum mechanics itself [13]. Such tests re-
|
||
quire sufficient shielding of the system from decoherence
|
||
so that an observed (full or partial) collapse of the wave-
|
||
function could be unambigously attributed to some novel
|
||
nonunitary mechanism in nature, such as those proposed
|
||
in dynamical reduction models [153–155]. This shielding,
|
||
however, is difficult to implement in practice, because
|
||
the large number of particles required for the reduction
|
||
mechanism to become effective will also lead to strong
|
||
decoherence [114, 156].
|
||
The superpositions realized in
|
||
current experiments are still not sufficiently macroscopic
|
||
to rule out collapse theories, although it has been demon-
|
||
strated [118] that matter-wave interferometry with large
|
||
molecular clusters (in the mass range between 106 and
|
||
108 amu) would be able to test the collapse theories pro-
|
||
posed in Refs. [154, 155]; such experiments may soon
|
||
become technologically feasible [11].
|
||
|
||
A.
|
||
Atoms in a cavity
|
||
|
||
In 1996 Brune et al. generated a superposition of ra-
|
||
diation fields with classically distinguishable phases in-
|
||
volving several photons [12, 150, 157]. This experiment
|
||
was the first to realize a mesoscopic Schr¨odinger-cat state
|
||
and allowed for the controlled observation and manipu-
|
||
lation of its decoherence. A rubidium atom is prepared
|
||
in a superposition of energy eigenstates |g⟩ and |e⟩ cor-
|
||
responding to two circular Rydberg states.
|
||
The atom
|
||
enters a cavity C containing a radiation field contain-
|
||
ing a few photons. If the atom is in the state |g⟩, the
|
||
field remains unchanged, whereas if it is in the state
|
||
|e⟩, the coherent state |α⟩ of the field undergoes a phase
|
||
shift φ, |α⟩ −→
|
||
��eiφα
|
||
�
|
||
; the experiment achieved φ ≈ π.
|
||
An initial superposition of the atom is therefore am-
|
||
plified into an entangled atom–field state of the form
|
||
1
|
||
√
|
||
|
||
2 (|g⟩ |α⟩ + |e⟩ |−α⟩).
|
||
The atom then passes through
|
||
an additional cavity, further transforming the superposi-
|
||
tion. Finally, the energy state of the atom is measured.
|
||
This disentangles the atom and the field and leaves the
|
||
latter in a superposition of the mesoscopically distinct
|
||
states |α⟩ and |−α⟩.
|
||
To monitor the decoherence of this superposition, a
|
||
second rubidium atom is sent through the apparatus. Af-
|
||
ter interacting with the field superposition state in the
|
||
cavity C, the atom will always be found in the same en-
|
||
ergy state as the first atom if the superposition has not
|
||
been decohered. This correlation rapidly decays with in-
|
||
creasing decoherence. Thus, by recording the measure-
|
||
|
||
ment correlation as a function of the wait time τ between
|
||
sending the first and second atom through the appara-
|
||
tus, the decoherence of the field state can be monitored.
|
||
Experimental results were in excellent agreement with
|
||
theoretical predictions [158, 159]. It was found that de-
|
||
coherence became faster as the phase shift φ and the
|
||
mean number ¯n = |α|2 of photons in the cavity C was
|
||
increased. Both results are expected, since an increase
|
||
in φ and ¯n means that the components in the superpo-
|
||
sition become more distinguishable. Recent experiments
|
||
have realized superposition states involving several tens
|
||
of photons [160] and have monitored the gradual deco-
|
||
herence of such states [161].
|
||
|
||
B.
|
||
Matter-wave interferometry
|
||
|
||
In these experiments (see Ref. [11] for a review), spatial
|
||
interference patterns are demonstrated for mesoscopic
|
||
molecules ranging from fullerenes [162] to molecular clus-
|
||
ters involving hundreds of atoms, with a total size of
|
||
up to 60 ˚A and masses of several thousand amu (see
|
||
Fig. 2) [163, 164].
|
||
Since the de Broglie wavelength of
|
||
such molecules is on the order of picometers, standard
|
||
double-slit interferometry is out of reach. Instead, the
|
||
experiments make use of the Talbot effect, an interfer-
|
||
ence phenomenon in which a plane wave incident on a
|
||
diffraction grating creates an image of the grating at mul-
|
||
tiples of a distance L behind the grating. In the experi-
|
||
ment, the molecular density (at a macroscopic distance L
|
||
from the grating) is scanned along the direction perpen-
|
||
dicular to the molecular beam.
|
||
An oscillatory density
|
||
pattern (corresponding to the image of the slits in the
|
||
grating) is observed, confirming the existence of coher-
|
||
ence and interference between the different paths of each
|
||
individual molecule passing through the grating. Recent
|
||
experiments have used an improved version of the origi-
|
||
nal Talbot–Lau setup [165], as well as optical ionization
|
||
gratings [166].
|
||
Decoherence is measured as a decrease of the visibil-
|
||
ity of this pattern (Fig. 2). The controlled decoherence
|
||
due to collisions with background gas particles [115, 116]
|
||
and due to emission of thermal radiation from heated
|
||
molecules [168] has been observed, showing a smooth de-
|
||
cay of visibility in agreement with theoretical predictions
|
||
[31, 117, 167]. These successes have led to speculations
|
||
that one could perform similar experiments using even
|
||
larger particles such as proteins and viruses [115, 169]
|
||
or carbonaceous aerosols [170]. Such experiments will be
|
||
limited by collisional and thermal decoherence and by
|
||
noise due to inertial forces and vibrations [115, 169, 170].
|
||
|
||
C.
|
||
Superconducting systems
|
||
|
||
Superconducting
|
||
quantum
|
||
interference
|
||
devices
|
||
(SQUIDs)
|
||
and
|
||
Cooper-pair
|
||
boxes
|
||
have
|
||
important
|
||
applications in quantum information processing.
|
||
A
|
||
|
||
|
||
18
|
||
NATURE COMMUNICATIONS | DOI: 10.1038/ncomms1263
|
||
|
||
NATURE COMMUNICATIONS | 2:263 | DOI: 10.1038/ncomms1263 | www.nature.com/naturecommunications
|
||
|
||
11 Macmillan Publishers Limited. All rights reserved.
|
||
|
||
ysics, single-particle
|
||
regarded as a para-
|
||
feature of quantum
|
||
objects of our mac-
|
||
rinciple has become
|
||
ng feld of quantum
|
||
ch in many labora-
|
||
nderstanding of the
|
||
uantum systems and
|
||
o the observation of
|
||
|
||
m interference with
|
||
r successful experi-
|
||
our study focuses on
|
||
ion of the molecule
|
||
ce. We do this with
|
||
vide useful molecu-
|
||
1 compares the size
|
||
8 and PFNS10, with
|
||
traphenylporphyrin
|
||
PF84 and TPPF152.
|
||
molecules in a three-
|
||
apitza-Dirac-Talbot-
|
||
|
||
rated in a thermal
|
||
ravitational free-fall
|
||
meter itself consists
|
||
amber at a pressure
|
||
mbrane with 90-nm
|
||
6 nm. Each slit of G1
|
||
ecular position that,
|
||
ads to a momentum
|
||
|
||
delocalization and
|
||
increasing distance
|
||
ser light wave with a
|
||
een the electric laser
|
||
y creates a sinusoidal
|
||
t matter waves. Te
|
||
n such that quantum
|
||
c molecular density
|
||
structure is sampled
|
||
cal to G1) across the
|
||
|
||
of the transmitted
|
||
MS).
|
||
added various tech-
|
||
to liquid samples, a
|
||
tial to maintain the
|
||
owed us to increase
|
||
r and many optimi-
|
||
were needed to meet
|
||
s with very massive
|
||
|
||
tum interferograms
|
||
re 3. In all cases the
|
||
ude of the sinusoidal
|
||
al, exceeds the maxi-
|
||
y a signifcant multi-
|
||
t shown for TPPF84
|
||
ed interference con-
|
||
ith individual scans
|
||
) and Vobs = 49% for
|
||
n, we have observed
|
||
10 and Vobs = 16 � 2%
|
||
|
||
for TPPF152 (see Figure 3), in which our classical model predicts
|
||
Vclass = 1%. Tis supports our claim of true quantum interference for
|
||
all these complex molecules.
|
||
|
||
Te most massive molecules are also the slowest and therefore
|
||
|
||
the most sensitive ones to external perturbations. In our particle
|
||
|
||
Figure 1 | Gallery of molecules used in our interference study. (a) The
|
||
fullerene C60 (m = 720 AMU, 60 atoms) serves as a size reference and
|
||
for calibration purposes; (b) The perfluoroalkylated nanosphere PFNS8
|
||
(C60[C12F25]8, m = 5,672 AMU, 356 atoms) is a carbon cage with eight
|
||
perfluoroalkyl chains. (c) PFNS10 (C60[C12F25]10, m = 6,910 AMU, 430
|
||
atoms) has ten side chains and is the most massive particle in the set.
|
||
(d) A single tetraphenylporphyrin TPP (C44H30N4, m = 614 AMU, 78
|
||
atoms) is the basis for the two derivatives (e) TPPF84 (C84H26F84N4S4,
|
||
m = 2,814 AMU, 202 atoms) and (f) TPPF152 (C168H94F152O8N4S4,
|
||
m = 5,310 AMU, 430 atoms). In its unfolded configuration, the latter is the
|
||
largest molecule in the set. Measured by the number of atoms, TPPF152
|
||
and PFNS10 are equally complex. All molecules are displayed to scale. The
|
||
scale bar corresponds to 10 Å.
|
||
|
||
y
|
||
|
||
X
|
||
|
||
Detector
|
||
|
||
G1
|
||
|
||
G2
|
||
|
||
G3
|
||
|
||
S3
|
||
|
||
S2
|
||
|
||
S1
|
||
|
||
Oven
|
||
|
||
Lens
|
||
|
||
Laser
|
||
|
||
Z
|
||
|
||
Figure 2 | Layout of the Kapitza-Dirac-Talbot-Lau (KDTL) interference
|
||
experiment. The effusive source emits molecules that are velocity-selected
|
||
by the three delimiters S1, S2 and S3. The KDTL interferometer is composed
|
||
of two SiNx gratings G1 and G3, as well as the standing light wave G2. The
|
||
optical dipole force grating imprints a phase modulation �(x)��opt·P/(v·wy)
|
||
onto the matter wave. Here �opt is the optical polarizability, P the laser
|
||
power, v the molecular velocity and wy the laser beam waist perpendicular
|
||
to the molecular beam. The molecules are detected using electron impact
|
||
ionization and quadrupole mass spectrometry.
|
||
|
||
0
|
||
0.4
|
||
0.8
|
||
1.2
|
||
1.6
|
||
4
|
||
|
||
6
|
||
|
||
8
|
||
10
|
||
|
||
20
|
||
|
||
30
|
||
|
||
visibility (%)
|
||
|
||
pressure (in 10−6 mbar)
|
||
|
||
FIG. 2. Left: Molecular clusters used in recent interference
|
||
experiments, drawn to scale (the scale bar represents 10 ˚A).
|
||
Figure from Ref. [163].
|
||
(a) Fullerene C60 (m = 720 amu,
|
||
60 atoms). (b) Perfluoroalkylated nanosphere PFNS8 (m =
|
||
5672 amu, 356 atoms).
|
||
(c) PFNS10 (m = 6910 amu, 430
|
||
atoms). (d) Tetraphenylporphyrin TPP (m = 614 amu, 78
|
||
atoms).
|
||
(e) TPPF84 (m = 2814 amu, 202 atoms).
|
||
(f)
|
||
TPPF152 (m = 5310 amu, 430 atoms). Right: Visibility of
|
||
interference fringes of C70 fullerenes as a function of the pres-
|
||
sure of the background gas. Measured values (circles) agree
|
||
well with the theoretical prediction (solid line) [31, 117, 167]
|
||
describing an exponential decay of visibility with pressure.
|
||
Figure adapted from Ref. [115].
|
||
|
||
SQUID consists of a ring of superconducting material
|
||
interrupted by thin insulating barriers, the Josephson
|
||
junctions (Fig. 3a).
|
||
At sufficiently low temperatures,
|
||
electrons of opposite spin condense into bosonic Cooper
|
||
pairs.
|
||
Quantum-mechanical tunneling of Cooper pairs
|
||
through the junctions leads to the flow of a resistance-
|
||
free supercurrent around the loop (Josephson effect),
|
||
which creates a magnetic flux threading the loop. The
|
||
collective center-of-mass motion of a macroscopic num-
|
||
ber (∼ 109) of Cooper pairs can then be represented by
|
||
a wave function labeled by a single macroscopic variable,
|
||
namely, the total trapped flux Φ through the loop.
|
||
The two possible directions of the supercurrent define
|
||
a qubit with basis states {|⟳⟩ , |⟲⟩}.
|
||
By adjusting an
|
||
external magnetic field, the SQUID can be biased such
|
||
|
||
(a)
|
||
|
||
(a)
|
||
|
||
80%
|
||
|
||
60%
|
||
|
||
40%
|
||
|
||
5
|
||
0
|
||
|
||
probability for ⟳
|
||
|
||
(b)
|
||
|
||
Josephson junction
|
||
|
||
superconducting
|
||
|
||
ring
|
||
|
||
supercurrent
|
||
|
||
(b)
|
||
|
||
(a)
|
||
|
||
delay time τ (ns)
|
||
|
||
80%
|
||
|
||
60%
|
||
|
||
40%
|
||
|
||
5
|
||
10
|
||
15
|
||
20
|
||
25
|
||
30
|
||
35
|
||
0
|
||
|
||
probability for ⟳
|
||
|
||
(b)
|
||
|
||
Josephson junction
|
||
|
||
superconducting
|
||
|
||
ring
|
||
|
||
supercurrent
|
||
|
||
FIG. 3. (a) Schematic illustration of a SQUID. A supercon-
|
||
ducting ring is interrupted by Josephson junctions, leading
|
||
to a dissipationless supercurrent.
|
||
(b) Decoherence of a su-
|
||
perposition of clockwise and counterclockwise supercurrents
|
||
in a superconducting qubit. The damping of the oscillation
|
||
amplitude corresponds to the gradual loss of coherence from
|
||
the system. Figure adapted from Ref. [173].
|
||
|
||
that the two lowest-lying energy eigenstates |0⟩ and |1⟩
|
||
are equal-weight superpositions of the persistent-current
|
||
states |⟳⟩ and |⟲⟩.
|
||
Such superposition states involving µA currents were
|
||
first experimentally observed in 2000 using spectroscopic
|
||
measurements [171, 172]. Their decoherence was subse-
|
||
quently measured using Ramsey interferometry [173], as
|
||
follows. Two consecutive microwave pulses are applied to
|
||
the system. During the delay time τ between the pulses,
|
||
the system evolves freely. After application of the second
|
||
pulse, the system is left in a superposition of |⟳⟩ and |⟲⟩,
|
||
with the relative amplitudes exhibiting an oscillatory de-
|
||
pendence on τ. A series of measurements in the basis
|
||
{|⟳⟩ , |⟲⟩} over a range of delay times τ then allows one
|
||
to trace out an oscillation of the occupation probabilities
|
||
for |⟳⟩ and |⟲⟩ as a function of τ (Fig. 3b). The envelope
|
||
of the oscillation is damped as a consequence of decoher-
|
||
ence acting on the system during the free evolution of
|
||
duration τ. From the decay of the envelope we can infer
|
||
the decoherence timescale; the original experiment gave
|
||
20 ns [173], while subsequent experiments have achieved
|
||
decoherence times of several µs [174].
|
||
Superpositions states and their decoherence have also
|
||
been observed in superconducting devices whose key vari-
|
||
able is charge (or phase), instead of the flux variable used
|
||
in SQUIDs. Such Cooper-pair boxes consist of a small
|
||
superconducting island onto which Cooper pairs can tun-
|
||
nel from a reservoir through a Josephson junction. Two
|
||
different charge states of the island, differing by at least
|
||
one Cooper pair, define the basis states. Coherent os-
|
||
cillations between such charge states were first observed
|
||
|
||
|
||
19
|
||
|
||
in 1999 [175]. In 2002, Vion et al. [176] reported thou-
|
||
sands of coherent oscillations with a decoherence time
|
||
of 0.5 µs. Similar results have been obtained for phase
|
||
qubits [177, 178], demonstrating decoherence times of
|
||
several µs.
|
||
|
||
VII.
|
||
DECOHERENCE AND THE
|
||
FOUNDATIONS OF QUANTUM MECHANICS
|
||
|
||
Can decoherence address foundational problems? If so,
|
||
which ones, and how? Addressing these subtle questions
|
||
is beyond the scope of this review; a few brief remarks
|
||
must suffice here.
|
||
(See Refs. [6, 7, 9, 21] for in-depth
|
||
discussions.) Decoherence, at its heart, is a technical re-
|
||
sult concerning the dynamics and measurement statistics
|
||
of open quantum systems. From this view, decoherence
|
||
merely addresses a consistency problem, by explaining
|
||
how and when the quantum probability distributions ap-
|
||
proach the classically expected distributions. Since deco-
|
||
herence follows directly from an application of the quan-
|
||
tum formalism to interacting quantum systems, it is not
|
||
tied to any particular interpretation of quantum mechan-
|
||
ics, nor does it supply such an interpretation, nor does it
|
||
amount to a theory that could make predictions beyond
|
||
those of standard quantum mechanics.
|
||
The predictively relevant part of decoherence theory
|
||
relies on reduced density matrices, whose formalism and
|
||
interpretation presume the collapse postulate and Born’s
|
||
|
||
rule. If we understand the “quantum measurement prob-
|
||
lem” as the question of how to reconcile the linear, de-
|
||
terministic evolution described by the Schr¨odinger equa-
|
||
tion with the occurrence of random measurement out-
|
||
comes, then decoherence has not solved this problem
|
||
[6, 9].
|
||
Decoherence does, however, address an aspect
|
||
sometimes associated with the quantum measurement
|
||
problem, namely the preferred-basis problem (at least
|
||
in the sense described in Sec. II C). Further explorations
|
||
of the role of the environment, such as in quantum Dar-
|
||
winism (see Sec. II D), can help illuminate fundamental
|
||
questions concerning information transfer and amplifica-
|
||
tion in the quantum setting.
|
||
Decoherence has been used to identify internal con-
|
||
cistency issues in interpretations of quantum mechanics,
|
||
and the picture associated with the decoherence process
|
||
has sometimes been seen as suggestive of particular inter-
|
||
pretations of quantum mechanics [6, 7]. Indeed, histori-
|
||
cally decoherence theory arose in the context of Zeh’s [1]
|
||
independent formulation of an Everett-style interpreta-
|
||
tion (see Ref. [179] for a historical analysis). Ultimately,
|
||
however, it seems that certain interpretations simply may
|
||
be more in need of decoherence than others for defin-
|
||
ing their structure; see Ref. [180] for the example of an
|
||
Everett-style interpretation [23]. At the end of the day,
|
||
any interpretation that does not involve entities, claims,
|
||
or structures in contradiction with the predictions of de-
|
||
coherence theory (which is to say, with the predictions of
|
||
quantum mechanics) will arguably remain viable.
|
||
|
||
[1] H.D. Zeh, Found. Phys. 1, 69 (1970)
|
||
[2] W.H. Zurek, Phys. Rev. D 24, 1516 (1981)
|
||
[3] W.H. Zurek, Phys. Rev. D 26, 1862 (1982).
|
||
doi:
|
||
10.1103/PhysRevD.26.1862
|
||
|
||
[4] J.P. Paz, W.H. Zurek, in Coherent Atomic Matter
|
||
Waves, Les Houches Session LXXII, Les Houches Sum-
|
||
mer School Series, vol. 72, ed. by R. Kaiser, C. West-
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