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Wiseman Milburn Chapter3

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QUANTUM MEASUREMENT

AND CONTROL

HOWARD M. WISEMAN
Griffith University

GERARD J. MILBURN
University of Queensland

EQUS Winter School students ONLY


do not distribute.

EQUS
3
Open quantum systems

3.1 Introduction
As discussed in Chapter 1, to understand the general evolution, conditioned and uncondi-
tioned, of a quantum system, it is necessary to consider coupling it to a second quantum
system. In the case in which the second system is much larger than the first, it is often
referred to as a bath, reservoir or environment, and the first system is called an open system.
The study of open quantum systems is important to quantum measurement for two reasons.
First, all real systems are open to some extent, and the larger a system is, the more
important its coupling to its environment will be. For a macroscopic system, such coupling
leads to very rapid decoherence. Roughly, this term means the irreversible loss of quantum
coherence, that is the conversion of a quantum superposition into a classical mixture. This
process is central to understanding the emergence of classical behaviour and ameliorating,
if not solving, the so-called quantum measurement problem.
The second reason why open quantum systems are important is in the context of gen-
eralized quantum measurement theory as introduced in Chapter 1. Recall from there that,
by coupling a quantum system to an ‘apparatus’ (a second quantum system) and then
measuring the apparatus, a generalized measurement on the system is realized. For an open
quantum system, the coupling to the environment is typically continuous (present at all
times). In some cases it is possible to monitor (i.e. continuously measure) the environment
so as to realize a continuous generalized measurement on the system.
In this chapter we are concerned with introducing open quantum systems, and with
discussing the first point, decoherence. We introduced the decoherence of a macroscopic
apparatus in Section 1.2.3, in the context of the von Neumann chain and Heisenberg’s
cut. To reiterate that discussion, direct projective measurements on a quantum system
do not adequately describe realistic measurements. Rather, one must consider making
measurements on an apparatus that has been coupled to the system. But how does one make
a direct observation on the apparatus? Should one introduce yet another system to model
the readout of the meter coupled to the actual system of study, and so on with meters upon
meters ad infinitum? This is the von Neumann chain [vN32]. To obtain a finite theory, the
experimental result must be considered to have been recorded definitely at some point:
Heisenberg’s cut [Hei30].

97

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98 Open quantum systems

The quantum measurement problem is that there is no physical basis for inserting a cut
at any particular point. However, there is a physical basis for determining the point in the
chain after which the cut may be placed without affecting any theoretical predictions. This
point is the point at which, for all practical purposes, the meter can be treated as a classical,
rather than a quantum, object. That such a point exists is due to decoherence brought about
by the environment of the apparatus.
Consider, for example, the single-photon measurement discussed in Section 1.5. The
system of study was the electromagnetic field of a single-mode microwave cavity. The
meter was an atomic system, suitably prepared. This meter clearly still behaves as a
quantum system; however, as other experiments by the same group have shown [RBH01],
the atomic ‘meter’ is in turn measured by ionization detectors. These detectors are, of course,
rather complicated physical systems involving electrical fields, solid-state components and
sophisticated electronics. Should we include these as quantum systems in our description?
No, for two reasons.
First, it is too hard. Quantum systems with many degrees of freedom are generally
intractable. This is due to the exponential increase in the dimension of the Hilbert space
with the number of components for multi-partite systems, as discussed in Section A.2.
Except for cases in which the Hamiltonian has an exceptionally simple structure, numerical
solutions are necessary for the quantum many-body problem.
Exercise 3.1 For the special case of a Hamiltonian that is invariant under particle per-
mutations show that the dimension of the total Hilbert space increases only linearly in the
number of particles.
However, even on today’s supercomputers, numerical solutions are intractable for 100 par-
ticles or more. Detectors typically have far more particles than this, and, more importantly,
they typically interact strongly with other systems in their environment.
Second, it is unnecessary. Detectors are not arbitrary many-body systems. They are
designed for a particular purpose: to be a detector. This means that, despite its being
coupled to a large environment, there are certain properties of the detector that, if initially
well defined, remain well defined over time. These classical-like properties are those that
are robust in the face of decoherence, as we will discuss in Section 3.7. Moreover, in
an ideal detector, one of these properties is precisely the one which becomes correlated
with the quantum system and apparatus, and so constitutes the measurement result. As we
will discuss in Section 4.8, sometimes it may be necessary to treat the detector dynamics
in greater detail in order to understand precisely what information the experimenter has
obtained about the system of study from the measurement result. However, in this case it is
still unnecessary to treat the detector as a quantum system; a classical model is sufficient.
The remainder of this chapter is organized as follows. In Section 3.2 we introduce the
simplest approach to modelling the evolution of open quantum systems: the master equation
derived in the Born–Markov approximations. In Section 3.3 we apply this to the simplest
(and historically first) example: radiative damping of a two-level atom. In the same section
we also describe damping of an optical cavity; this treatment is very similar, insofar as both
involve a rotating-wave approximation. In Section 3.4 we consider systems in which the

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3.2 The Born–Markov master equation 99

rotating-wave approximation cannot be made: the spin–boson model and Brownian motion.
In all of these examples so far, the reservoir consists of harmonic oscillators, modes of a
bosonic field (such as the electromagnetic field). In Section 3.5 we treat a rather different
sort of reservoir, consisting of a fermionic (electron) field, coupled to a single-electron
system.
In Section 3.6 we turn to more formal results: the mathematical conditions that a Marko-
vian theory of open quantum systems should satisfy. Armed with these examples and this
theory, we tackle the issue of decoherence and its relation to the quantum measurement
problem in Section 3.7, using the example of Brownian motion. Section 3.8 develops this
idea in the direction of continuous measurement (which will be considered in later chap-
ters), using the examples of the spin–boson model, and the damped and driven atom. The
ground-breaking decoherence experiment from the group of Haroche is analysed in Sec-
tion 3.9 using the previously introduced damped-cavity model. In Section 3.10 we discuss
two more open systems of considerable experimental interest: a quantum electromechanical
oscillator and a superconducting qubit. Finally (apart from the further reading), we present
in Section 3.11 a Heisenberg-picture description of the dynamics of open quantum systems,
and relate it to the descriptions in earlier sections.

3.2 The Born–Markov master equation


In this section we derive a general expression for the evolution of an open quantum system
in the Born and Markov approximations. This will then be applied to particular cases in
subsequent sections. The essential idea is that the system couples weakly to a very large
environment. The weakness of the coupling ensures that the environment is not much
affected by the system: this is the Born approximation. The largeness of the environment
(strictly, the closeness of its energy levels) ensures that from one moment to the next the
system effectively interacts with a different part of the environment: this is the Markov
approximation.
Although the environment is relatively unaffected by the system, the system is pro-
foundly affected by the environment. Specifically, it typically becomes entangled with the
environment. For this reason, it cannot be described by a pure state, even if it is initially in
a pure state. Rather, as shown in Section A.2.2, it must be described by a mixed state ρ.
The aim of the Born–Markov approximation is to derive a differential equation for ρ. That
is, rather than having to use a quantum state for the system and environment, we can find
the approximate evolution of the system by solving an equation for the system state alone.
For historical reasons, this is called a master equation.
The dynamics of the state ρtot for the system plus environment is given in the Schrödinger
picture by
ρ̇ tot (t) = −i[ĤS + ĤE + V̂ , ρtot (t)]. (3.1)
Here ĤS is the Hamiltonian for the system (that is, it acts as the identity on the environment
Hilbert space), ĤE is that for the environment, and V̂ includes the coupling between the
two. Following the formalism in Section A.1.3, it is convenient to move into an interaction

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100 Open quantum systems

frame with free Hamiltonian Ĥ0 = ĤS + ĤE . That is, instead of Ĥtot = Ĥ0 + V̂ , we use
V̂IF (t) = eiĤ0 t V̂ e−iĤ0 t . (3.2)
In this frame, the Schrödinger-picture equation is
ρ̇ tot;IF (t) = −i[V̂IF (t), ρtot;IF (t)], (3.3)
where the original solution to Eq. (3.1) is found as
ρtot (t) = e−iĤ0 t ρtot;IF eiĤ0 t . (3.4)
The equations below are all in the interaction frame, but for ease of notation we drop the
IF subscripts. That is, V̂ will now denote V̂IF (t), etc.
Since the interaction is assumed to be weak, the differential equation Eq. (3.3) may be
solved as a perturbative expansion. We solve Eq. (3.3) implicitly to get
 t
ρtot (t) = ρtot (0) − i dt1 [V̂ (t1 ), ρtot (t1 )]. (3.5)
0
We then substitute this solution back into Eq. (3.3) to yield
 t
ρ̇ tot (t) = −i[V̂ (t), ρtot (0)] − dt1 [V̂ (t), [V̂ (t1 ), ρtot (t1 )]]. (3.6)
0
Since we are interested here only in the evolution of the system, we trace over the environ-
ment to get an equation for ρ ≡ ρS = TrE [ρtot ] as follows:
ρ̇ (t) = −i TrE [V̂ (t), ρtot (0)]
 t1
− dt1 TrE [V̂ (t), [V̂ (t1 ), ρtot (t1 )]] . (3.7)
0

This is still an exact equation but is also still implicit because of the presence of ρtot (t1 )
inside the integral. However, it can be made explicit by making some approximations, as
we will see. It might be asked why we carry the expansion to second order in V , rather than
use the first-order equation (3.3), or some higher-order equation. The answer is simply that
second order is the lowest order which generally gives a non-vanishing contribution to the
final master equation.
We now assume that at t = 0 there are no correlations between the system and its
environment:
ρtot (0) = ρ(0) ⊗ ρE (0). (3.8)
This assumption may be physically unreasonable for some interactions between the system
and its environment [HR85]. However, for weakly interacting systems it is a reasonable
approximation. We also split V̂ (which, it must be remembered, denotes the Hamiltonian
in the interaction frame) into two parts:
V̂ (t) = V̂S (t) + V̂SE (t), (3.9)
where V̂S (t) acts nontrivially only on the system Hilbert space, and where
Tr[V̂SE (t)ρtot (0)] = 0.
Exercise 3.2 Show that this can be done, irrespective of the initial system state ρ(0), by
making a judicious choice of Ĥ0 .

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3.2 The Born–Markov master equation 101

We now make a very important assumption, namely that the system only weakly affects
the bath so that in the last term of Eq. (3.7) it is permissible to replace ρtot (t1 ) by ρ(t1 ) ⊗
ρE (0). This is known as the Born approximation, or the weak-coupling approximation.
Under this assumption, the evolution becomes
 t
ρ̇ (t) = −i[V̂S (t), ρ(t)] − dt1 TrE [V̂SE (t), [V̂SE (t1 ), ρ(t1 ) ⊗ ρE (0)]] . (3.10)
0

Note that this assumption is not saying that ρtot (t1 ) is well approximated by ρ(t1 ) ⊗ ρE (0)
for all purposes, and indeed this is not the case; the coupling between the system and the
environment in general entangles them. This is why the system becomes mixed, and why
measuring the environment can reveal information about the system, as will be considered
in later chapters, but this factorization assumption is a good one for the purposes of deriving
the evolution of the system alone.
The equation (3.10) is an integro-differential equation for the system state matrix ρ.
Because it is nonlocal in time (it contains a convolution), it is still rather difficult to solve. We
seek instead a local-in-time differential equation, sometimes called a time-convolutionless
master equation, that is, an equation in which the rate of change of ρ(t) depends only upon
ρ(t) and t. This can be justified if the integrand in Eq. (3.10) is small except in the region
t1 ≈ t. Since the modulus of ρ(t1 ) does not depend upon t1 , this property must arise from
the physics of the bath. As we will show in the next section, it typically arises when the
system couples roughly equally to many energy levels of the bath (eigenstates of ĤE ) that
are close together in energy. Under this approximation it is permissible to replace ρ(t1 ) in
the integrand by ρ(t), yielding
 t
ρ̇ (t) = −i[V̂S (t), ρ(t)] − dt1 TrE [V̂ (t), [V̂ (t1 ), ρ(t) ⊗ ρE (0)]] . (3.11)
0

This is sometimes called the Redfield equation [Red57].


Even though the approximation of replacing ρ(t1 ) by ρ(t) is sometimes referred to as a
Markov approximation [Car99, GZ04], the resulting master equation (3.11) is not strictly
Markovian. That is because it has time-dependent coefficients, as will be discussed in
Section 3.4. In fact, it can be argued [BP02] that this additional approximation is not really
an additional approximation at all: the original Born master equation Eq. (3.10) would not
be expected to be more accurate than the Redfield equation Eq. (3.11).
To obtain a true Markovian master equation, an autonomous differential equation for
ρ(t), it is necessary to make a more substantial Markov approximation. This consists of
again appealing to the sharpness of the integrand at t1 ≈ t, this time to replace the lower
limit of the integral in Eq. (3.11) by −∞. In that way we get finally the Born–Markov
master equation for the system in the interaction frame:
 t
ρ̇ (t) = −i[V̂S (t), ρ(t)] − dt1 TrE [V̂ (t), [V̂ (t1 ), ρ(t) ⊗ ρE (0)]] . (3.12)
−∞

We will see in examples below how, for physically reasonable properties of the bath, this
gives a master equation with time-independent coefficients, as required. In particular, we
require ĤE to have a continuum spectrum in the relevant energy range, and we require

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102 Open quantum systems

ρE (0) to commute with ĤE . In practice, the latter condition is often relaxed in order to
yield an equation in which VS (t) may be time-dependent, but the second term in Eq. (3.12)
is still required to be time-independent.

3.3 The radiative-damping master equation


In this section we repeat the derivation of the Born–Markov master equation for a specific
case: radiative damping of quantum optical systems (a two-level atom and a cavity mode).
This provides more insight into the Born and Markov approximations made above.

3.3.1 Spontaneous emission


Historically, the irreversible dynamics of spontaneous emission were introduced by Bohr
[Boh13] and, more quantitatively, by Einstein [Ein17], before quantum theory had been
developed fully. It was Wigner and Weisskopf [WW30] who showed in 1930 how the
radiative decay of an atom from the excited to the ground state could be explained within
quantum theory. This was possible only after Dirac’s quantization of the electromagnetic
field, since it is the infinite (or at least arbitrarily large) number of electromagnetic field
modes which forms the environment or bath into which the atom radiates. The theory of
spontaneous emission is described in numerous recent texts [GZ04, Mil93], so our treatment
will just highlight key features.
As discussed in Section A.4, the free Hamiltonian for a mode of the electromagnetic
field is that of a harmonic oscillator. The total Hamiltonian for the bath is thus
 †
ĤE = ωk b̂k b̂k , (3.13)
k
where the integer k codes all of the information specifying the mode: its frequency, direc-
tion, transverse structure and polarization. The mode structure incorporates the effect of
bulk materials with a linear refractive index (such as mirrors) and the like, so this is all
described by the Hamiltonian ĤE . The annihilation and creation operators for each mode
are independent and they obey the bosonic commutation relations

[b̂k , b̂l ] = δkl . (3.14)
We will assume that only two energy levels of the atom are relevant to the problem, so
the free Hamiltonian for the atom is
ωa
Ĥa = σ̂z . (3.15)
2
Here ωa is the energy (or frequency) difference between the ground |g and excited |e
states, and σ̂z = |e e| − |g g| is the inversion operator for the atom. (See Box 3.1.)
The coupling of the electromagnetic field to an atom can be described by the so-called
dipole-coupling Hamiltonian
 †
V̂ = (gk b̂k + gk b̂k )(σ̂+ + σ̂− ). (3.16)
k

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3.3 The radiative-damping master equation 103

Box 3.1 The Bloch representation


Consider a two-level system with basis states |0 and |1 . The three Pauli operators
for the system are defined as
σ̂x = |0 1| + |1 0|, (3.17)
σ̂y = i|0 1| − i|1 0|, (3.18)
σ̂z = |1 1| − |0 0|. (3.19)
These obey the following product relations:
σ̂j σ̂k = δj k 1̂ + i j kl σ̂l . (3.20)
Here the subscripts stand for x, y or z, while 1̂ is the 2 × 2 unit matrix, i is the unit
imaginary and j kl is the completely antisymmetric tensor (that is, transposing any
two subscripts changes its sign) satisfying xyz = 1. From this commutation relations
like [σ̂x , σ̂y ] = 2iσ̂z and anticommutation relations like σ̂x σ̂y + σ̂y σ̂x = 0 are easily
derived.
The state matrix for a two-level system can be written using these operators as
ρ(t) = 12 [1̂ + x(t)σ̂x + y(t)σ̂y + z(t)σ̂z ], (3.21)
where x, y, z are the averages of the Pauli operators. That is, x = Tr[σ̂x ρ] et cetera.
Recall that Tr[ρ 2 ] ≤ 1, with equality for and only for pure states. This translates to
x 2 + y 2 + z2 ≤ 1, (3.22)
again with equality iff the system is pure. Thus, the system state can be represented by
a 3-vector inside (on) the unit sphere for a mixed (pure) state. The vector is called the
Bloch vector and the sphere the Bloch sphere.
For a two-level atom, it is conventional to identify |1 and |0 with the ground |g
and excited |e states. Then z is called the atomic inversion, because it is positive iff
the atom is inverted, that is, has a higher probability of being in the excited state than
in the ground state. The other components, y and x, are called the atomic coherences,
or components of the atomic dipole.
Another two-level system is a spin-half particle. Here ‘spin-half’ means that the
maximum angular momentum contained in the intrinsic spin of the particle is /2. The
operator for the spin angular momentum (a 3-vector) is (/2) × (σ̂x , σ̂y , σ̂z ). That is, in
this case the Bloch vector (x, y, z) has a meaning in ordinary three-dimensional space,
as the mean spin angular momentum, divided by /2.
Nowadays it is common to study a two-level quantum system without any particular
physical representation in mind. In this context, it is appropriate to use the term qubit –
a quantum bit.

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104 Open quantum systems

Here σ̂+ = (σ̂− )† = |e g| is the raising operator for the atom. The coefficient gk (which
can be assumed real without loss of generality) is proportional to the dipole matrix element
for the transition (which we will assume is non-zero) and depends on the structure of mode
−1/2
k. In particular, it varies as Vk , where Vk is the physical volume of mode k.
It turns out that the rate γ of radiative decay for an atom in free space is of order 108 s−1 or
smaller. This is much smaller than the typical frequency ωa for an optical transition, which
is of order 1015 s−1 or greater. Since γ is due to the interaction Hamiltonian V̂ , it seems
reasonable to treat V̂ as being small compared with Ĥ0 = Ĥa + ĤE . Thus we are justified
in following the method of Section 3.2. We begin by calculating V̂ in the interaction frame:

 †
V̂IF (t) = (gk b̂k e−iωk t + gk b̂k eiωk t )(σ̂+ e+iωa t + σ̂− e−iωa t ). (3.23)
k

Exercise 3.3 Show this, using the same technique as in Exercise 1.30.
The first approximation we make is to remove the terms in V̂IF (t) that rotate (in the complex
plane) at frequency ωa + ωk for all k, yielding
 †
V̂IF (t) = (gk b̂k σ̂+ e−i(ωk −ωa )t + gk b̂k σ̂− ei(ωk −ωa )t ). (3.24)
k

As discussed in Section 1.5, this is known as the rotating-wave approximation (RWA). It


is justified on the grounds that these terms rotate so fast (∼1015 s−1 ) that they will average
to zero over the time-scale of radiative decay (∼10−8 s) and hence not contribute to this
process.1 This approximation leads to significant simplifications.
Now substitute Eq. (3.24) into the exact equation (3.7) for the system state ρ(t) in
Section 3.2. To proceed we need to specify the initial state of the field, which we take to be
the vacuum state (see Appendix A). The first term in Eq. (3.7) is then exactly zero.
Exercise 3.4 Show this, and show that it holds also for a field state in a thermal state
ρE ∝ exp[−ĤE /(kB T )].
Hint: Expand ρE in the number basis.
For this choice of ρE , we have V̂S = 0; later, we will relax this assumption.
For convenience, we now drop the IF subscripts, while still working in the interaction
frame. Under the Born approximation, the equation for ρ(t) becomes
 t
ρ̇ = − dt1 {(t − t1 )[σ̂+ σ̂− ρ(t1 ) − σ̂− ρ(t1 )σ̂+ ] + H.c.} , (3.25)
0

where H.c. stands for the Hermitian conjugate term, and



(τ ) = gk2 e−i(ωk −ωa )τ . (3.26)
k

1
Terms like these are, however, important for a proper calculation of the Lamb frequency shift ωa , but that is beyond the scope
of this treatment.

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3.3 The radiative-damping master equation 105

Exercise 3.5 Show this, using the properties of the vacuum state and the field operators.
Next, we wish to make the Markov approximation. This can be justified by considering
the reservoir correlation function (3.26). For an atom in free space, there is an infinite
number of modes, each of which is infinite in volume, so the modulus squared of the
coupling coefficients is infinitesimal. Thus we can justify replacing the sum in Eq. (3.26)
by an integral,
 ∞
(τ ) = dω ρ(ω)g(ω)2 ei(ωa −ω)τ . (3.27)
0

Here ρ(ω) is the density of field modes as a function of frequency. This is infinite but
the product ρ(ω)g(ω)2 is finite. Moreover, ρ(ω)g(ω)2 is a smoothly varying function of
frequency for ω in the vicinity of ωa . This means that the reservoir correlation function,
(τ ), is sharply peaked at τ = 0.
Exercise 3.6 Convince yourself of this by considering a toy model in which ρ(ω)g(ω)2 is
independent of ω in the range (0, 2ωa ) and zero elsewhere.
Thus we can apply the Markov approximation to obtain the master equation
ωa
ρ̇ = −i [σ̂z , ρ] + γ D[σ̂− ]ρ. (3.28)
2
Here the superoperator D[Â] is defined for an arbitrary operator  by
1
D[Â]ρ ≡ Âρ † − († Âρ + ρ † Â). (3.29)
2
The real parameters ωa (the frequency shift) and γ (the radiative decay rate) are defined
as
 ∞
γ
ωa − i = −i (τ )dτ. (3.30)
2 0

Exercise 3.7 Derive Eq. (3.28)


In practice the frequency shift (called the Lamb shift) due to the atom coupling to the elec-
tromagnetic vacuum is small, but can be calculated properly only by using renormalization
theory and relativistic quantum mechanics.
The solution of Eq. (3.28) at any time t > 0 depends only on the initial state at time
t = 0; there is no memory effect. The evolution is non-unitary because of the D term, which
represents radiative decay. This can be seen by considering the Bloch representaton of the
atomic state, as discussed in Box 3.1.
Exercise 3.8 Familiarize yourself with the Bloch sphere by finding the points on it cor-
responding to the eigenstates of the Pauli matrices, and the point corresponding to the
maximally mixed state.
For example, the equation of motion for the inversion can be calculated as ż = Tr[σ̂z ρ̇ ],
and re-expressing the right-hand side in terms of x, y and z. In this case we find simply

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106 Open quantum systems

ż = −γ (z + 1), so the inversion decays towards the ground state (z = −1) exponentially
at rate γ . Thus we can equate γ to the A coefficient of Einstein’s theory [Ein17], and
1/γ to the atomic lifetime. The energy lost by the atom is radiated into the field, hence
the term radiative decay. The final state here is pure, but, if it starts in the excited state,
then the atom will become mixed before it becomes pure again. This mixing is due to
entanglement between the atom and the field: the total state is a superposition of excited
atom and vacuum-state field, and ground-state atom and field containing one photon of
frequency ω0 . This process is called spontaneous emission because it occurs even if there
are initially no photons in the field.
Exercise 3.9 Show that, if the atom is prepared in the excited state at time t = 0, the Bloch
vector at time t is (0, 0, 2e−γ t − 1). At what time is the entanglement between the atom and
the radiated field maximal?
Strictly, the frequency of the emitted photon has a probability distribution centred on ω0
with a full width-at-half-maximum height of γ . Thus a finite lifetime of the atomic state
leads to an uncertainty in the energy of the emitted photon, which can be interpreted as an
uncertainty in the energy separation of the atomic transition. The reciprocal relation between
the lifetime 1/γ and the energy uncertainty γ is sometimes referred to as an example of
the time–energy uncertainty relation. It should be noted that its meaning is quite different
from that of the Heisenberg uncertainty relations mentioned in Section 1.2.1, since time
is not a system property represented by an operator; it is merely an external parameter.
Nevertheless, this relation is of great value heuristically, as we will see.
We note two important generalizations. Firstly, the atom may be driven coherently by
a classical field. As long as the system Hamiltonian which describes this driving is weak
compared with Ĥa , it will have negligible effect on the derivation of the master equation in
the interaction frame, and can simply be added at the end. Alternatively, this situation can
be modelled quantum mechanically by taking the bath to be initially in a coherent state,
which will make V̂S (t) non-zero, and indeed time-dependent in general (this is discussed in
Section 3.11.2 below). In any case, the effect of driving is simply to add another Hamiltonian
evolution term to the final master equation (3.12) in the interaction frame. If the frequency of
oscillation of the driving field is ω0 ≈ ωa , then it is most convenient to work in an interaction
frame using Ĥa = ω0 σ̂z /2, rather than Ĥa = ωa σ̂z /2. This is because, on moving to the
interaction frame, it makes the total effective Hamiltonian for the atom time-independent:
 
Ĥdrive = σ̂x + σ̂z . (3.31)
2 2
Here  = ωa + ωa − ω0 is the effective detuning of the atom, while , the Rabi fre-
quency, is proportional to the amplitude of the driving field and the atomic dipole moment.
Here the phase of the driving field acts as a reference to define the in-phase (x) and
in-quadrature (y) parts of the atomic dipole relative to the imposed force. The master equa-
tion for a resonantly driven, damped atom is known as the resonance fluorescence master
equation.

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3.3 The radiative-damping master equation 107

Exercise 3.10 (a) Show that the Bloch equations for resonance fluorescence are
γ
ẋ = −y − x, (3.32)
2
γ
ẏ = −z + x − y, (3.33)
2
ż = +y − γ (z + 1), (3.34)

and that the stationary solution is


   
x −4
y  =  2γ  γ 2 + 22 + 42 −1 . (3.35)
z ss −γ 2 − 42

(b) Compare θ = arctan(yss /xss ) and A = xss2 + yss2 with the phase and amplitude of the
long-time response of a classical, lightly damped, harmonic oscillator to an applied peri-
odic force with magnitude proportional to  and detuning . In what regime does the
two-level atom behave like the harmonic oscillator?
Hint: First, define interaction-frame phase and amplitude variables for the classical oscil-
lator; that is, variables that would be constant in the absence of driving and damping.
The second generalization is that the field need not be in a vacuum state, but rather
(for example) may be in a thermal state (i.e. with a Planck distribution of photon numbers
[GZ04]). This gives rise to stimulated emission and absorption of photons. In that case, the
total master equation in the Markov approximation becomes
 
 
ρ̇ = −i σ̂x + σ̂z , ρ + γ (n̄ + 1)D[σ̂− ]ρ + γ n̄D[σ̂+ ]ρ, (3.36)
2 2
where n̄ = {exp[ωa /(kB T )] − 1}−1 is the thermal mean photon number evaluated at the
atomic frequency (we have here restored ). This describes the (spontaneous and stimulated)
emission of photons at a rate proportional to γ (n̄ + 1), and (stimulated) absorption of
photons at a rate proportional to γ n̄.

3.3.2 Cavity emission


Another system that undergoes radiative damping is a mode of the electromagnetic field in
an optical cavity. In quantum optics the term ‘cavity’ is used for any structure (typically
made of dielectric materials) that will store electromagnetic energy at discrete frequencies.
The simplest sort of cavity is a pair of convex mirrors facing each other, but no mirrors are
perfectly reflecting, and the stored energy will decay because of transmission through the
mirrors.
Strictly speaking, a mode of the electromagnetic field should be a stationary solution of
Maxwell’s equations [CRG89] and so should not suffer a decaying amplitude. However,
it is often convenient to treat pseudomodes, such as those that are localized within a

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108 Open quantum systems

cavity, as if they were modes, and to treat the amplitude decay as radiative damping due
to coupling to the (pseudo-)modes that are localized outside the cavity [GZ04]. This is a
good approximation, provided that the coupling is weak; that is, that the transmission at
the mirrors is small.
The simplest case to consider is a single mode (of frequency ωc ) of a one-dimensional
cavity with one slightly lossy mirror and one perfect mirror. We use â for the annihilation
operator for the cavity mode of interest and b̂k for those of the bath as before. The total
Hamiltonian for system plus environment, in the RWA, is [WM94a]
 †
 †
Ĥ = ωc â † â + ωk b̂k b̂k + gk (â † b̂k + â b̂k ). (3.37)
k k

The first term represents the free energy of the cavity mode of interest, the second is for
the free energy of the many-mode field outside the cavity, and the last term represents the
dominant terms in the coupling of the two for optical frequencies.
For weak coupling the Born–Markov approximations are justified just as for spontaneous
emission. Following the same procedure leads to a very similar master equation for the
cavity field, in the interaction frame:

ρ̇ = γ (n̄ + 1)D[â]ρ + γ n̄D[â † ]ρ. (3.38)

Here n̄ is the mean thermal photon number of the external field evaluated at the cavity
frequency ωc . We have ignored any environment-induced frequency shift, since this simply
redefines the cavity resonance ωc .
The first irreversible term in Eq. (3.38) represents emission of photons from the cavity.
The second irreversible term represents an incoherent excitation of the cavity due to thermal
photons in the external field.
Exercise 3.11 Show that the rate of change of the average photon number in the cavity is
given by

d â † â
= −γ â † â + γ n̄. (3.39)
dt
Note that here (and often from here on) we are relaxing our convention on angle brackets
established in Section 1.2.1. That is, we may indicate the average of a property for a
quantum system by angle brackets around the corresponding operator.
From Eq. (3.39) it is apparent that γ is the decay rate for the energy in the cavity.
Assuming that ρ(ω)g(ω)2 is slowly varying with frequency, we can evaluate this decay rate
to be

γ  2πρ(ωc )g(ωc )2 . (3.40)

Exercise 3.12 Show this explicitly using the example of Exercise


 0 3.6.
Note: This result can be obtained more simply by replacing −∞ dτ e−iωτ by π δ(ω), which
is permissible when it appears in an ω-integral with a flat integrand.

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3.4 Irreversibility without the rotating-wave approximation 109

In more physical terms, if the mirror transmits a proportion T  1 of the energy in the
cavity on each reflection, and the round-trip time for light in the cavity is τ , then γ = T /τ .
As in the atomic case, we can include other dynamical processes by simply adding an
appropriate Hamiltonian term to the interaction-frame master equation (3.38), as long as
the added Hamiltonian is (in some sense) small compared with Ĥ0 . In particular, we can
include a coherent driving term, to represent the excitation of the cavity mode by an external
laser of frequency ωc , by adding the following driving Hamiltonian [WM94a]:

Ĥdrive = i â † − i ∗ â. (3.41)

Exercise 3.13 Show that, in the zero-temperature limit, the stationary state for the driven,
damped cavity is a coherent state |α with α = 2 /γ .
Hint: Make the substitution â = 2 /γ + â0 , and show that the solution of the master
equation is the vacuum state for â0 .

3.4 Irreversibility without the rotating-wave approximation


In the previous examples of radiative decay of an atom and a cavity, the system Hamil-
tonian ĤS produced oscillatory motion in the system with characteristic frequencies (ωa
and ωc , respectively) much larger than the rate of decay. This allowed us to make a RWA
 †
in describing the system–environment coupling Hamiltonian as k gk (ŝ b̂k + ŝ † b̂k ), where
ŝ is a system lowering operator. That is, the coupling describes the transfer of quanta
of excitation of the oscillation between the system and the bath. When there is no such
large characteristic frequency, it is not possible to make such an approximation. In this sec-
tion we discuss two examples of this, the spin–boson model and quantum Brownian motion.
We will, however, retain the model for the bath as a collection of harmonic oscillators and
the assumption that the interaction between system and environment is weak in order to
derive a master equation perturbatively.

3.4.1 The spin–boson model


Consider a two-level system, coupled to a reservoir of harmonic oscillators, such that the
total Hamiltonian is
   p̂2 mk ωk2 q̂k2
 
Ĥ = σ̂x + k
+ + σ̂z gk q̂k , (3.42)
2 k
2mk 2 k

where q̂k are the coordinates of each of the environmental oscillators. This could describe
a spin-half particle (see Box 3.1), in the interaction frame with respect to a Hamiltonian
proportional to σ̂z . Such a Hamiltonian would describe a static magnetic field in the z
(‘longitudinal’) direction. Then the first term would describe resonant driving (as in the
two-level atom case) by a RF magnetic field in the x–y (‘transverse’) plane, and the last
term would describe fluctuations in the longitudinal field. However, there are many other

EQUS
110 Open quantum systems

physical situations for which this Hamiltonian is an approximate description, including


quantum tunnelling in a double-well potential [LCD+ 87].
Since the frequency  can be small, even zero, we cannot make a RWA in this model.
Nevertheless, we can follow the procedure in Section 3.2, where Ĥ0 comprises the first two
terms in Eq. (3.42). We assume the bath to be in a thermal equilibrium state of temperature
1/(kB β) with respect to its Hamiltonian. Then, replacing ρ(t1 ) by ρ(t) in Eq. (3.10) yields
the master equation with time-dependent coefficients [PZ01]
 t
ρ̇ (t) = − dt1 ν(t1 )[σ̂z (t), [σ̂z (t − t1 ), ρ(t)]]
0

− iη(t1 )[σ̂z (t), {σ̂z (t − t1 ), ρ(t)}] , (3.43)


where {Â, B̂} = ÂB̂ + B̂ Â is known as an anticommutator, and the kernels are given by
 ∞
1 2
ν(t1 ) = gk {q̂k (t), q̂k (t − t1 )} = dω J (ω)cos(ωt1 )[1 + 2n̄(ω)],
2 k 0

(3.44)

i 2 ∞
η(t1 ) = g [q̂k (t), q̂k (t − t1 )] = dω J (ω)sin(ωt1 ). (3.45)
2 k k 0

Here the spectral density function is defined by


 g 2 δ(ω − ωk )
J (ω) = k
, (3.46)
k
2mk ωk
and n̄(ω) is the mean occupation number of the environmental oscillator at frequency ω.
It is given as usual by the Planck law 1 + 2n̄(ω) = coth(βω/2) (where, in deference to
Planck, we have restored his constant). The sinusoidal kernels in Eqs. (3.44) and (3.45)
result from the oscillatory time dependence of q̂k (t) from the bath Hamiltonian.
The time dependence of the operator σ̂z (t), in the interaction frame with respect to Ĥ0 ,
is given by
σ̂z (t) = σ̂z cos(t) + σ̂y sin(t). (3.47)
Exercise 3.14 Show this by finding and solving the Heisenberg equations of motion for σ̂y
and σ̂z , for the Hamiltonian Ĥ0 .
Substituting this into Eq.(3.43), and then moving out of the interaction frame, yields the
Schrödinger-picture master equation2

ρ̇ = −i[Ĥnh ρ − ρ Ĥnh ] − ζ ∗ (t)σ̂z ρ σ̂y − ζ (t)σ̂y ρ σ̂z − D(t)[σ̂z , [σ̂z , ρ]]. (3.48)
Here
 

Ĥnh = + ζ (t) σ̂x (3.49)
2
2
With minor corrections to the result in Ref. [PZ01].

EQUS
3.4 Irreversibility without the rotating-wave approximation 111

is a non-Hermitian operator (the Hermitian part of which can be regarded as the Hamilto-
nian), while
 t
ζ (t) = dt1 (ν(t1 ) − iη(t1 ))sin(t1 ), (3.50)
0
 t
D(t) = dt1 ν(t1 )cos(t1 ). (3.51)
0

The environment thus shifts the free Hamiltonian for the system (via Re[ζ ]) and introduces
irreversible terms (via Im[ζ ] and D). Note that if  = 0 only the final term in Eq. (3.48)
survives.
To proceed further we need an explicit form of the spectral density function. The simplest
case is known as Ohmic dissipation, in which the variation with frequency is linear at low
frequencies. We take
2
ω
J (ω) = 2η , (3.52)
π 2 + ω2
where is a cut-off frequency, as required in order to account for the physically necessary
fall-off of the coupling at sufficiently high frequencies, and η is a dimensionless parameter
characterizing the strength of the coupling between the spin and the environment. After
splitting ζ (t) into real and imaginary parts as ζ (t) = f (t) − iγ (t), we can easily do the
integral to find the decay term γ (t). It is given by
   
− t
γ (t) = γ∞ 1 − cos(t) + sin(t) e . (3.53)

This begins at zero and decays (at a rate determined by the high-frequency cut-off) to a con-
stant γ∞ ∝ 2 /( 2 + 2 ). The other terms depend on the temperature of the environment
and are not easy to evaluate analytically. The diffusion constant can be shown to approach
the asymptotic value
2
D∞ = η coth(β/2). (3.54)
2 + 2
The function f (t) also approaches (algebraically, not exponentially) a limiting value, which
at high temperatures is typically much smaller than D∞ (by a factor proportional to ).
In the limit that  → 0, we find

D∞ → 2ηkB T , (3.55)

and, as mentioned previously, ζ (t) is zero in this limit. In this case the master equation
takes the following simple form in the long-time limit:

ρ̇ = −2ηkB T [σ̂z , [σ̂z , ρ]]. (3.56)

This describes dephasing of the spin in the x–y plane at rate D∞ /2.

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112 Open quantum systems

3.4.2 Quantum Brownian motion


Another important model for which the RWA cannot be used is quantum Brownian motion.
In this case we have a single particle with mass M, with position and momentum operators
X̂ and P̂ . It may be moving in some potential, and is coupled to an environment of simple
harmonic oscillators. This is described by the Hamiltonian
P̂ 2   p̂ 2 mk ωk2 q̂k2
 
Ĥ = + V (X̂) + k
+ + X̂ gk q̂k . (3.57)
2M k
2mk 2 k

The derivation of the perturbative master equation proceeds as in the case of the spin–boson
model [PZ01]. It is only for simple potentials, such as the harmonic V (X̂) = M2 X̂2 /2,
that the evolution generated by Ĥ0 can be solved analytically. The derivation is much as in
the spin–boson case, but, for dimensional correctness, we must replace η by Mγ , where γ
is a rate. The result is

ρ̇ = −i[P̂ 2 /(2M) + M (t)


˜ 2 X̂2 /2, ρ] − iγ (t)[X̂, {P̂ , ρ}]

− D(t)[X̂, [X̂, ρ]] − f (t)[X̂, [P̂ , ρ]]. (3.58)


˜
Here (t) is a shifted frequency and γ (t) is a momentum-damping rate. D(t) gives rise to
diffusion in momentum and f (t) to so-called anomalous diffusion.
If we again assume the Ohmic spectral density function (3.52) then we can evaluate these
time-dependent coefficients. The coefficients all start at zero, and tend asymptotically to
constants, with the same properties as in the spin–boson case. The shifted frequency  ˜

tends asymptotically to  − 2γ∞ , which is unphysical for too large. In the high-
temperature limit, kB T  , with   one finds
2
D∞ = Mγ  coth(β/2) → 2γ∞ kB T M, (3.59)
2 + 2
while f (t) is negligible (∝ −1 ) compared with this.
Replacing the above time-dependent coefficients with their asymptotic values will be a
bad approximation at short times, and indeed may well lead to nonsensical results (as will
be discussed in Section 3.6). However, at long times it is reasonable to use the asymptotic
values, giving the Markovian master equation

ρ̇ = −i[P̂ 2 /(2M) + M 
˜ 2∞ X̂2 /2, ρ] − iγ∞ [X̂, {P̂ , ρ}] − 2γ∞ kB T M[X̂, [X̂, ρ]]. (3.60)

Exercise 3.15 Show that this is identical with the Markovian master equation of Eq. (3.12)
for this case.
The first irreversible term in Eq. (3.60) describes the loss, and the second the gain, of kinetic
energy, as can be seen in the following exercise.
Exercise 3.16 Derive the equations of motion for the means and variances of the position
and momentum using the high-temperature Brownian-motion master equation, Eq. (3.60).
Thus show that momentum is damped exponentially at rate 2γ∞ , but that momentum

EQUS
3.5 Fermionic reservoirs 113

diffusion adds kinetic energy at rate 2γ∞ kB T . Show that for  ˜ ∞ = 0 the steady-state
energy of the particle is kB T /2, as expected from thermodynamics.

3.5 Fermionic reservoirs


In the previous examples the environment was taken to be composed of a very large
(essentially infinite) number of harmonic oscillators. Such an environment is called bosonic,
because the energy quanta of these harmonic oscillators are analogous to bosonic particles,
with the associated commutation relations for the annihilation and creation operators (3.14).
There are some very important physical situations in which the environment of a local
system is in fact fermionic. An example is a local quantum dot (which acts something
like a cavity for a single electron) coupled via tunnelling to the many electron states of a
resistor. The annihilation and creation operators for fermionic particles, such as electrons,
obey anticommutation relations

{âk , âl } = δkl , (3.61)
{âk , âl } = 0. (3.62)

The study of such systems is the concern of the rapidly developing field of mesoscopic
electronics [Dat95, Imr97]. Unfortunately, perturbative master equations might not be
appropriate in many situations when charged fermions are involved, since such systems are
strongly interacting. However, there are some experiments for which a perturbative master
equation is a good approximation. We now consider one of these special cases to illustrate
some of the essential differences between bosonic and fermionic environments.
The concept of a mesoscopic electronic system emerged in the 1980s as experiments on
small, almost defect-free, conductors and semiconductors revealed unexpected departures
from classical current–voltage characteristics at low temperatures. The earliest of these
results indicated quantized conductance. The classical description of conductance makes
reference to random scattering of carriers due to inelastic collisions. However, in mesoscopic
electronic systems, the mean free path for inelastic scattering may be longer than the length
of the device. Such systems are dominated by ballistic behaviour in which conduction
is due to the transport of single carriers, propagating in empty electron states above a
filled Fermi sea, with only elastic scattering from confining potentials and interactions
with magnetic fields. As Landauer [Lan88, Lan92] and Büttiker [Büt88] first made clear,
conductance in such devices is determined not by inelastic scattering, but by the quantum-
mechanical transmission probability, T , across device inhomogeneities. If a single ballistic
channel supports a single transverse Fermi mode (which comprises two modes when spin is
included), the transmission probability is T ≈ 1. The resulting conductance of that channel
is the reciprocal of the quantum of resistance. This is given by the Landauer–Büttiker theory
as [Dat95]
π
RQ = ≈ 12.9 k. (3.63)
e2

EQUS
114 Open quantum systems

µS
µS µD = e VSD
L
c
γL γR
SOURCE
µD
R
DRAIN

Fig. 3.1 A schematic representation of a quantum dot in the conduction band. Position runs from left
to right and energy runs vertically. The quasibound state in the dot is labelled c. The grey regions
labelled L and R represent metallic electronic states filled up to the local Fermi level. The difference
in the Fermi levels between left and right is determined by the source–drain bias voltage as eVSD .

A quantum dot is a three-dimensional confining potential for electrons or holes in a


semiconductor, and can be fabricated in a number of ways [Tur95]. We will consider a very
simple model in which the dot has only a single bound state for one electron. This is not as
artificial as it may sound. Although a single quantum dot in fact contains a very large number
of electrons, at low temperatures this system of electrons is close to the Fermi ground state.
In a semiconductor dot the ground state is typically a filled valence band and an unoccupied
conduction band. In a metallic dot (or grain as it sometimes called) the ground state is
the conduction band filled up to the Fermi energy. At low temperatures and weak bias the
current is carried by a few electrons near the Fermi energy and we are typically concerned
only with additional electrons injected onto the dot. Because electrons are charged, large
energy gaps can appear in the spectrum of multi-electron quantum dots, in addition to the
quantization of energy levels due to confinement. This phenomenon is called Coulomb
blockade [Kas93]. The Coulomb blockade energy required to add a single electron to a
quantum dot is e2 /(2C), where the capacitance C can be very small (less than 10−16 F) due
to the small size of these systems. If the charging energy is large enough, compared with
thermal energy, we can assume that only a single bound state for an additional electron is
accessible in the quantum dot. Typically this would require a temperature below 1 K.
We also assume that the dot is coupled via tunnel junctions to two fermionic reservoirs;
see Fig. 3.1. A tunnel junction is a region in the material from which charge carriers
classically would be excluded by energy conservation. While propagating solutions of the
Schrödinger equation cannot be found in such a region, exponentially decaying amplitudes
can exist. We will assume that the region is not so extensive that all amplitudes decay to
zero, but small enough for the coupling, due to the overlap of amplitudes inside and outside
the region, to be small. In that case the coupling between propagating solutions on either
side of the region can be treated perturbatively.

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3.5 Fermionic reservoirs 115

We assume that the reservoirs remain in the normal (Ohmic) conducting state. The total
system is not in thermal equilibrium due to the bias voltage VSD across the dot. However,
the two reservoirs are held very close to thermal equilibrium at temperature T , but at
different chemical potentials through contact to an external circuit via an Ohmic contact.
We refer to the fermionic reservoir with the higher chemical potential as the source (also
called the emitter) and the one with the lower chemical potential as the drain (also called
the collector). The difference in chemical potentials is given by µS − µD = eVSD . In this
circumstance, charge may flow through the dot, and an external current will flow. The
necessity to define a chemical potential is the first major difference between fermionic
systems and the bosonic environments of quantum optics.
A perturbative master-equation approach to this problem is valid only if the resistance of
the tunnel junction, R, is large compared with the quantum of resistance RQ . The physical
meaning of this condition is as follows. If for simplicity we denote the bias voltage of the
junction as V , then the average current through the junction is V /R, so the tunnelling rate is
 = V /(eR). Thus the typical time between tunnelling events is  −1 = eR/V . Now, if the
lifetime of the quasibound state is τ , then, by virtue of the time–energy uncertainty relation
discussed in Section 3.3.1, there is an uncertainty in the energy level of order /τ . If the
external potential is to control the tunnelling then this energy uncertainty must remain less
than eV . Thus the lifetime must be at least of order /(eV ). If we demand that the lifetime
be much less than the time between tunnelling events, so that the events do not overlap in
time, we thus require /(eV )  eR/V . This gives the above relation between R and the
quantum of resistance.
The total Hamiltonian of a system composed of the two Fermi reservoirs, connected by
two tunnel barriers to a single Fermi bound state, is (with  = 1)
 †

ĤQD+leads = εkS âk âk + εc ĉ† ĉ + εpD b̂p† b̂p
k p
 †

+ (TkS ĉ† âk + TkS ∗ âk ĉ) + (TpD b̂p† ĉ + TpD ∗ ĉ† b̂p ). (3.64)
k p

† †
Here ak (ak ), c(c† ) and bp (bp ) are the fermion annihilation (creation) operators of electrons
in the source (S) reservoir, in the central quantum dot and in the drain (D) reservoir,
respectively. Because of the fermion anticommutation relations, the dot is described by just
two states.
Exercise 3.17 Show from Eqs. (3.61) and (3.62) that the eigenvalues for the fermion

number operator âl âl are 0 and 1, and that, if the eigenstates are |0 and |1 , respectively,

then âl |0 = |1 .
The first three terms in Eq. (3.64) comprise Ĥ0 . The energy of the bound state without
bias is ε0 , which under bias becomes εc = ε0 − αeV , where α is a structure-dependent
coefficient. The single-particle energies in the source and drain are, respectively, εkS =
k 2 /(2m) and εpD = p2 /(2m) − eV . The energy reference is at the bottom of the conduction

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116 Open quantum systems

band of the source reservoir. Here, and below, we are assuming spin-polarized electrons so
that we do not have to sum over the spin degree of freedom.
The fourth and fifth terms in the Hamiltonian describe the coupling between the quasi-
bound electrons in the dot and the electrons in the reservoir. The tunnelling coefficients TkS
and TpD depend upon the profile of the potential barrier between the dot and the reservoirs,
and upon the bias voltage. We will assume that at all times the two reservoirs remain in
their equlibrium states despite the tunnelling of electrons. This is a defining characteristic
of a reservoir, and comes from assuming that the dynamics of the reservoirs are much faster
than those of the quasibound quantum state in the dot.
In the interaction frame the Hamiltonian may be written as


2

V̂ (t) = ĉ† ϒ̂j (t)eiεc t + ĉϒ̂j (t)e−iεc t , (3.65)
j =1

where the reservoir operators are given by


 
TkS âk e−iεk t , TpD b̂p e−iεp t .
S D
ϒ̂1 (t) = ϒ̂2 (t) = (3.66)
k p

We now obtain an equation of motion for the state matrix ρ of the bound state in the dot
by following the standard method in Section 3.2. The only non-zero reservoir correlation
functions we need to compute are
 t

Ij N (t) = dt1 ϒj (t)ϒj (t1 ) e−iεc (t−t1 ) , (3.67)
0
 t

Ij A (t) = dt1 ϒj (t1 )ϒj (t) e−iεc (t−t1 ) . (3.68)
0

Here N and A stand for normal (annihilation operators after creation operators) and
antinormal (vice versa) ordering of operators – see Section A.5. In order to illustrate the
important differences between the fermionic case and the bosonic case discussed previously,
we will now explicitly evaluate the first of these correlation functions, I1N (t).
Using the definition of the reservoir operators and the assumed thermal Fermi distribution
of the electrons in the source, we find
  t
I1N (t) = n̄Sk |TkS |2 dt1 exp[i(εkS − εc )(t − t1 )]. (3.69)
k 0

Since the reservoir is a large system, we can introduce a density of states ρ(ω) as usual and
replace the sum over k by an integral to obtain
 ∞  0
I1N (t) = S S
dω ρ(ω)n̄ (ω)|T (ω)| 2
dτ e−i(ω−εc )τ , (3.70)
0 −t

where we have also changed the variable of time integration. The dominant term in the
frequency integration will come from frequencies near εc because the time integration is

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3.5 Fermionic reservoirs 117

significant at that point. For fermionic reservoirs, the expression for the thermal occupation
number is [Dat95]

n̄S (ω) = [1 + e(ω−ωf )/kB T ]−1 , (3.71)

where ωf is the Fermi energy (recall that  = 1). We assume that the bias is such that the
quasibound state of the dot is below the Fermi level in the source. This implies that near
ω = εc , and at low temperatures, the average occupation of the reservoir state is very close
to unity [Dat95].
Now we make the Markov approximation to derive an autonomous master equation as
in Section 3.2. On extending the limits of integration from −t to −∞ in Eq. (3.70) as
explained before, I1N may be approximated by the constant

I1N (t) ≈ πρ(εc )|TS (εc )|2 ≡ γL /2. (3.72)

This defines the effective rate γL of injection of electrons from the source (the left reservoir
in Fig. 3.1) into the quasibound state of the dot. This rate will have a complicated dependence
on the bias voltage through both εc and the coupling coefficients |TS (ω)|, which can be
determined by a self-consistent band calculation. We do not address this issue; we simply
seek the noise properties as a function of the rate constants.
By evaluating all the other correlation functions under similar assumptions, we find that
the quantum master equation for the state matrix representing the dot state in the interaction
frame is given by
dρ γL † γR
= (2ĉ ρ ĉ − ĉĉ† ρ − ρ ĉĉ† ) + (2ĉρ ĉ† − ĉ† ĉρ − ρ ĉ† ĉ), (3.73)
dt 2 2
where γL and γR are constants determining the rate of injection of electrons from the source
into the dot and from the dot into the drain, respectively.
From this master equation it is easy to derive the following equation for the mean
occupation number n(t) = Tr[ĉ† ĉρ(t)]:
dn
= γL (1 − n ) − γR n . (3.74)
dt
Exercise 3.18 Show this, and show that the steady-state occupancy of the dot is n ss =
γL /(γL + γR ).
The effect of Fermi statistics is evident in Eq. (3.74). If there is an electron on the dot,
n = 1, and the occupation of the dot can decrease only by emission of an electron into
the drain at rate γR .
It is at this point that we need to make contact with measurable quantities. In the case
of electron transport, the measurable quantities reduce to current I (t) and voltage V (t).
The measurement results are a time series of currents and voltages, which exhibit both sys-
tematic and stochastic components. Thus I (t) and V (t) are classical conditional stochastic
processes, driven by the underlying quantum dynamics of the quasibound state on the dot.

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118 Open quantum systems

The reservoirs in the Ohmic contacts play a key role in defining the measured quantities
and ensuring that they are ultimately classical stochastic processes. Transport through the
dot results in charge fluctuations in either the left or the right channel. These fluctuations
decay extremely rapidly, ensuring that the channels remain in thermal equilibrium with the
respective Ohmic contacts. For this to be possible, charge must be able to flow into and out
of the reservoirs from an external circuit.
If a single electron tunnels out of the dot into the drain between time t and t + dt,
its energy is momentarily above the Fermi energy. This electron scatters very strongly
from the electrons in the drain and propagates into the right Ohmic contact, where it is
perfectly absorbed. The nett effect is a small current pulse in the external circuit of total
charge eL = eCR /(CL + CR ). Here CL/R is the capacitance between the dot and the L/R
reservoir, and we have ignored any parasitic capacitance between source and drain. This
is completely analogous to perfect photodetection: a photon emitted from a cavity will be
detected with certainty by a detector that is a perfect absorber. Likewise, when an electron in
the right channel tunnels onto the dot, there is a rapid relaxation of this unfilled state back to
thermal equilibrium as an electron is emitted from the right Ohmic contact into the depleted
state of the source. This again results in a current pulse carrying charge eR = e − eL in the
circuit connected to the Ohmic contacts.
The energy gained when one electron is emitted from the left reservoir is, by definition,
the chemical potential of that reservoir, µL , while the energy lost when one electron is
absorbed into the right reservoir is µR . The nett energy transferred between reservoirs is
µL − µR . This energy is supplied by the external voltage, V , and thus µL − µR = eV . On
average, in the steady state, the same current flows in the source and drain:

Jss ≡ eL γL (1 − n ss ) + eR γR n ss (3.75)
= eγL (1 − n ss ) = eγR n ss (3.76)
γ L γR
=e . (3.77)
γ L + γR

Exercise 3.19 Verify the identity of these expressions.


From this we see that the average tunnelling rate of the device,  as previously defined, is
given by
 −1
1 1
= + . (3.78)
γL γR

Typical values for the tunnelling rates achievable in these devices are indicated by results
from an experiment by Yacoby et al. [YHMS95] in which single-electron transmission
through a quantum dot was measured. The quantum dot was defined by surface gates on
a GaAs/AlGaAs two-dimensional electron gas. The quantum dot was 0.4 µm wide and
0.5 µm long and had an electron temperature of 100 mK. They measured a tunnelling rate
of order 0.3 GHz.

EQUS
3.6 The Lindblad form and positivity 119

Box 3.2 Quantum dynamical semigroups


Formally solving the master equation for the state matrix defines a map from the state
matrix at time 0 to a state matrix at later times t by Nt : ρ(0) → ρ(t) = Nt ρ(0) for
all times t ≥ 0. This dynamical map must be completely positive (see Box 1.3). More
formally, we require a quantum dynamical semigroup [AL87], which is a family of
completely positive maps Nt for t ≥ 0 such that
r NN =N
t s t+s
r Tr[(N ρ)Â] is a continuous function of t for any state matrix ρ and Hermitian operator Â.
t

The family forms a semigroup rather than a group because there is not necessarily any
inverse. That is, Nt is not necessarily defined for t < 0.
These conditions formally capture the idea of Markovian dynamics of a quantum
system. (Note that there is no implication that all open-system dynamics must be
Markovian.) From these conditions it can be shown that there exists a superoperator L
such that
dρ(t)
= Lρ(t), (3.79)
dt
where L is called the generator of the map Nt . That is,
ρ(t) = Nt ρ(0) = eLt ρ(0). (3.80)
Moreover, this L must have the Lindblad form.

3.6 The Lindblad form and positivity


We have seen a number of examples in which the dynamics of an open quantum system can
be described by an automonous differential equation (a time-independent master equation)
for the state matrix of the system. What is the most general form that such an equation can
take such that the solution is always a valid state matrix? This is a dynamical version of the
question answered in Box 1.3 of Chapter 1, which was as follows: what are the physically
allowed operations on a state matrix? In fact, the question can be formulated in a way that
generalizes the notion of operations to a quantum dynamical semigroup – see Box. 3.2
It was shown by Lindblad in 1976 [Lin76] that, for a Markovian master equation ρ̇ = Lρ,
the generator of the quantum dynamics must be of the form


K
Lρ = −i[Ĥ , ρ] + D[L̂k ]ρ, (3.81)
k=1

for Ĥ Hermitian and {L̂j } arbitrary operators. Here D is the superoperator defined earlier
 †
in Eq. (3.29). For mathematical rigour [Lin76], it is also required that K k=1 L̂k L̂k be a
bounded operator, but that is often not satisfied by the operators we use, so this requirement
is usually ignored. This form is known as the Lindblad form, and the operators {L̂k }

EQUS
120 Open quantum systems

are called Lindblad operators. The superoperator L is sometimes called the Liouvillian
superoperator, by analogy with the operator which generates the evolution of a classical
probability distribution on phase space, and the term Lindbladian is also used.
Each term in the sum in Eq. (3.81) can be regarded as an irreversible channel. It is
important to note, however, that the decomposition of the generator into the Lindblad form
is not unique. We can reduce the ambiguity by requiring that the operators 1̂, L̂1 , L̂2 , . . ., L̂k
be linearly independent. We are still left with the possibility of redefining the Lindblad
operators by an arbitrary K × K unitary matrix Tkl :

K
L̂k → Tkl L̂l . (3.82)
l=1

In addition, L is invariant under c-number shifts of the Lindblad operators, accompanied


by a new term in the Hamiltonian:

i ∗
K
L̂k → L̂k + χk , Ĥ → Ĥ − χ L̂k − H.c. . (3.83)
2 k=1 k
Exercise 3.20 Verify the invariance of the master equation under (3.82) and (3.83).
In the case of a single irreversible channel, it is relatively simple to evaluate the completely
positive map Nt = exp(Lt) formally as


Nt = Nt(m) , (3.84)
m=0

where the operations N (m) (t) are defined by


 t  tm  t2
Nt(m) = dtm dtm−1 · · · dt1 S(t − tm )X
0 0 0

× S(tm − tm−1 )X · · · S(t2 − t1 )X S(t1 ), (3.85)


with Nt(0) = S(t). Here the superoperators S and X are defined by
 †

S(τ ) = J e−τ (iĤ +L̂ L̂/2) , (3.86)

X = J [L̂], (3.87)
where the superoperator J is as defined in Eq. (1.80).
Exercise 3.21 Verify the above expression for Nt by calculating N0 and ρ̇ (t), where
ρ(t) = Nt ρ(0). Also verify that Nt is a completely positive map, as defined in Chapter 1.
As we will see in Chapter 4, Eq. (3.85) can be naturally interpreted in terms of a stochastic
evolution consisting of periods of smooth evolution, described by S(τ ), interspersed with
jumps, described by X .
Most of the examples of open quantum systems that we have considered above led, under
various approximations, to a Markov master equation of the Lindblad form. However, as

EQUS
3.7 Decoherence and the pointer basis 121

the example of Brownian motion (Section 3.4.2) showed, this is not always the case. It
turns out that the time-dependent Brownian-motion master equation (3.58) does preserve
positivity. It is only when making the approximations leading to the time-independent, but
non-Lindblad, equation (3.60) that one loses positivity. Care must be taken in using master
equations such as this, which are not of the Lindblad form, because there are necessarily
initial states yielding time-evolved states that are non-positive (i.e. are not quantum states at
all). Thus autonomous non-Lindblad master equations must be regarded as approximations,
but, on the other hand, the fact that one has derived a Lindblad-form master equation does
not mean that one has an exact solution. The approximations leading to the high-temperature
spin–boson master equation (3.56) may be no more valid than those leading to the high-
temperature Brownian-motion master equation (3.60), for example. Whether or not a given
open system is well approximated by Markovian dynamics can be determined only by a
detailed study of the physics.

3.7 Decoherence and the pointer basis


3.7.1 Einselection
We are now in a position to state, and address, one of the key problems of quantum
measurement theory: what defines the measured observable? Recall the binary system
and binary apparatus introduced in Section 1.2.4. For an arbitrary initial system (S) state,
and appropriate initial apparatus (A) state, the final combined state after the measurement
interaction is

1
|  = sx |x |y := x , (3.88)
x=0

where |x and |y denote the system and apparatus in the measurement basis. A measurement
of the apparatus in this basis will yield Y = x with probability |sx |2 , that is, with exactly
the probability that a direct projective measurement of a physical quantity of the form

Ĉ = x c(x)|x S x| on the system would have given. On the other hand, as discussed in
Section 1.2.6, one could make a measurement of the apparatus in some other basis. For
example, measurement in a complementary basis |p A yields no information about the
system preparation at all.
In general one could read out the apparatus in the arbitrary orthonormal basis

|φ0 = α ∗ |0 + β ∗ |1 , (3.89)
|φ1 = β|0 − α|1 , (3.90)

where |α|2 + |β|2 = 1. The state after the interaction between the system and the apparatus
can now equally well be written as

|  = d0 |ψ0 S ⊗ |φ0 A + d1 |ψ1 S ⊗ |φ1 A , (3.91)

EQUS
122 Open quantum systems

where d0 |ψ0 S = αs0 |0 + βs1 |1 and d1 |ψ1 S = β ∗ s0 |0 − α ∗ s1 |1 . Note that |ψ0 and
|ψ1 are not orthogonal if |φ0 and |φ1 are different from |0 and |1 .
Exercise 3.22 Show that this is true except for the special case in which |s0 | = |s1 |.
It is apparent from the above that there is only one basis (the measurement basis) in
which one should measure the apparatus in order to make an effective measurement of
the system observable Ĉ. Nevertheless, measuring in other bases is equally permitted by
the formalism, and yields different sorts of information. This does not seem to accord
with our intuition that a particular measurement apparatus is constructed, often at great
effort, to measure a particular system quantity. The flaw in the argument, however, is that
it is often not possible on physical grounds to read out the apparatus in an arbitrary basis.
Instead, there is a preferred apparatus basis, which is determined by the nature of the
apparatus and its environment. This has been called the pointer basis [Zur81]. For a well-
constructed apparatus, the pointer basis will correspond to the measurement basis as defined
above.
The pointer basis of an apparatus is determined by how it is built, without reference to
any intended measured system to which it may be coupled. One expects the measurement
basis of the apparatus, |0 , |1 , to correspond to two macroscopic classically distinguishable
states of a particular degree of freedom of the apparatus. This degree of freedom could, for
example, be the position of a pointer, whence the name ‘pointer basis’. An apparatus for
which the pointer could be in a superposition of two distinct macroscopic states does not
correspond to our intuitive idea of a pointer. Thus we expect that the apparatus can never
enter a superposition of two distinct pointer states as Eq. (3.89) would require.
This is a kind of selection rule, called einselection (environmentally induced selection)
by Zurek [Zur82]. In essence it is justified by an apparatus–environment interaction that
very rapidly couples the pointer states to orthogonal environment (E) states:

|y |z := 0 → |y |z := y E , (3.92)

where here |z denotes an environment state. This is identical in form to the original
system–apparatus interaction. However, the crucial point is that now the total state is


1
|  = sx |x |y := x |z := x . (3.93)
x=0

If we consider using a different basis {|φ0 , |φ1 } for the apparatus, we find that it is not
possible to write the total state in the form of Eq. (3.93). That is,


1
|  = dx |ψx S |φx A |θx E , (3.94)
x=0

for any coefficients dx and states for the system and environment.
Exercise 3.23 Show that this is true except for the special case in which |s0 | = |s1 |.

EQUS
3.7 Decoherence and the pointer basis 123

Note that einselection does not solve the quantum measurement problem in that it does
not explain how just one of the elements of the superposition in Eq. (3.93) appears to become
real, with probability |sx |2 , while the others disappear. The solutions to that problem are
outside the scope of this book. What the approach of Zurek and co-workers achieves is to
explain why, for macroscopic objects like pointers, some states are preferred over others in
that they are (relatively) unaffected by decoherence. Moreover, they have argued plausibly
that these states have classical-like properties, such as being localized in phase space. These
states are not necessarily orthogonal states, as in the example above, but they are practically
orthogonal if they correspond to distinct measurement outcomes [ZHP93].

3.7.2 A more realistic model


The above example is idealized in that we considered only two possible environment states.
In reality the pointer may be described by continuous variables such as position. In this case,
it is easy to see how physical interactions lead to an approximate process of einselection in
the position basis. Most interactions depend upon the position of an object, and the position
of a macroscopic object such as a pointer will almost instantaneously become correlated
with many degrees of freedom in the environment, such as thermal photons, dust particles
and so on. This process of decoherence rapidly destroys any coherence between states of
macroscopically different position, but these states of relatively well-defined position are
themselves little affected by the decoherence process (as expressed ideally in Eq. (3.92)).
Decoherence in this pointer basis can be reasonably modelled using the Brownian-
motion master equation introduced in Section 3.4.2. In this situation, the dominant term in
the master equation is the last one (momentum diffusion), so we describe the evolution of
the apparatus state by

ρ̇ = −γ λ−2
T [X̂, [X̂, ρ]]. (3.95)

Here we have used γ for γ∞ , and λT is the thermal de Broglie wavelength, (2MkB T )−1/2 . It
is called this because the thermal equilibrium state matrix for a free particle, in the position
basis

ρ(x, x  ) = x|ρ|x  , (3.96)

has the form ρ(x, x  ) ∝ exp[−(x − x  )2 /(4λ2T )]. That is, the characteristic coherence length
of the quantum ‘waves’ representing the particle (first introduced by de Broglie) is λT . In
this position basis the above master equation is easy to solve:

ρ(x, x  ; t) = exp[−γ t(x − x  )2 /λ2T ]ρ(x, x  ; 0). (3.97)

Exercise 3.24 Show this. Note that this does not give the thermal equilibrium distribution
in the long-time limit because the dissipation and free-evolution terms have been omitted.
Let the initial state for the pointer be a superposition of two states, macroscopically dif-
ferent in position, corresponding to two different pointer readings. Let 2s be the separation

EQUS
124 Open quantum systems

of the states, and σ their width. For s  σ , the initial state matrix can be well approximated
by
ρ(x, x  ; 0) = (1/2)[ψ− (x) + ψ+ (x)][ψ−∗ (x  ) + ψ+∗ (x  )], (3.98)
where

ψ± (x) = (2π σ 2 )−1/4 exp −(x ∓ s)2 /(2σ 2 ) . (3.99)
That is, ρ(x, x  ; 0) is a sum of four equally weighted bivariate Gaussians, centred in (x, x  )-
space at (−s, −s), (−s, s), (s, −s) and (s, s). But the effect of the decoherence (3.95)
on these four peaks is markedly different. The off-diagonal ones will decay rapidly, on a
time-scale
 2
−1 λT
τdec = γ . (3.100)
2s
For s  λT , as will be the case in practice, this decoherence time is much smaller than the
dissipation time,
τdiss = γ −1 . (3.101)
The latter will also correspond to the time-scale on which the on-diagonal peaks in ρ(x, x  )
change shape under Eq. (3.97), provided that σ ∼ λT . This seems a reasonable assumption,
since one would wish to prepare a well-localized apparatus (small σ ), but if σ  λT then
it would have a kinetic energy much greater than the thermal energy kB T and so would
dissipate energy at rate γ anyway.
The above analysis shows that, under reasonable approximations, the coherences (the
off-diagonal terms) in the state matrix decay much more rapidly than the on-diagonal terms
change. Thus the superposition is transformed on a time-scale t, such that τdec  t  τdiss ,
into a mixture of pointer states:
ρ(x, x  ; t) ≈ (1/2)[ψ− (x)ψ−∗ (x  ) + ψ+ (x)ψ+∗ (x)]. (3.102)
Moreover, for macroscopic systems this time-scale is very short. For example, if s = 1 mm,
T = 300 K, M = 1 g and γ = 0.01 s−1 , one finds (upon restoring  where necessary)
τdec ∼ 10−37 s, an extraordinarily short time. On such short time-scales, it could well be
argued that the Brownian-motion master equation is not valid, and that a different treatment
should be used (see for example Ref. [SHB03]). Nevertheless, this result can be taken as
indicative of the fact that there is an enormous separation of time-scales between that on
which the pointer is reduced to a mixture of classical states and the time-scale on which
those classical states evolve.

3.8 Preferred ensembles


In the preceding section we argued that the interaction of a macroscopic apparatus with
its environment preserves classical states and destroys superpositions of them. From the
simple model of apparatus–environment entanglement in Eq. (3.92), and from the solution

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3.8 Preferred ensembles 125

to the (cut-down) Brownian-motion master equation (3.97), it is seen that the state matrix
becomes diagonal in this pointer basis. Moreover, from Eq. (3.92), the environment carries
the information about which pointer state the system is in. Any additional evolution of
the apparatus (such as that necessary for it to measure the system of interest) could cause
transitions between pointer states, but again this information would also be carried in the
environment so that at all times an observer could know where the apparatus is pointing,
so to speak.
It would be tempting to conclude from the above examples that all one need do to find
out the pointer basis for a given apparatus is to find the basis which diagonalizes its state
once it has reached equilibrium with its environment. However, this is not the case, for two
reasons. The first reason is that the states forming the diagonal basis are not necessarily
states that are relatively unaffected by the decoherence process. Rather, as mentioned above,
the latter states will in general be non-orthogonal. In that case the preferred representation
of the equilibrium state matrix

ρss = ℘k π̂k (3.103)
k

will be in terms of an ensemble E = {℘k , π̂k } of pure states, with positive weights ℘k ,
represented by non-orthogonal projectors: π̂j π̂k = δj k π̂k . The second reason, which is
generally ignored in the literature on decoherence and the pointer basis, is that the mere
fact that the state of a system becomes diagonal in some basis, through entanglement with
its environment, does not mean that by observing the environment one can find the system
to be always in one of those diagonal states. Once again, it may be that one has to consider
non-orthogonal ensembles, as in Eq. (3.103), in order to find a set of states that allows a
classical description of the system. By this we mean that the system can be always known
to be in one of those states, but to make transitions between them.
The second point above is arguably the more fundamental one for the idea that decoher-
ence explains the emergence of classical behaviour. That is, the basic idea of einselection
is that there is a preferred ensemble for ρss for which an ignorance interpretation holds.
With this interpretation of Eq. (3.103) one would claim that the system ‘really’ is in one of
the pure states π̂k , but that one happens to be ignorant of which π̂k (i.e. which k) pertains.
The weight ℘k would be interpreted as the probability that the system has state π̂k . For
this to hold, it is necessary that in principle an experimenter could know which state π̂k the
system is in at all times by performing continual measurements on the environment with
which the system interacts. The pertinent index k would change stochastically such that
the proportion of time for which the system has state π̂k is ℘k . This idea was first identified
in Ref. [WV98]. The first point in the preceding paragraph then says that the states in the
preferred ensemble should also be robust in the face of decoherence. For example, if the
decoherence is described by a Lindbladian L then one could use the criterion adopted in
Ref. [WV98]. This is that the average fidelity

F (t) = ℘k Tr[π̂k exp(Lt) π̂k ] (3.104)
k

EQUS
126 Open quantum systems

should have a characteristic decay time that is as long as possible (and, for macroscopic
systems, one hopes that this is much longer than that of a randomly chosen ensemble).
In the remainder of this section we are concerned with elucidating when an ignorance
interpretation of an ensemble representing ρss is possible. As well as being important in
understanding the role of decoherence, it is also relevant to quantum control, as will be
discussed in Chapter 6. Let us restrict the discussion to Lindbladians having a unique
stationary state defined by

Lρss = 0. (3.105)

Also, let us consider only stationary ensembles for ρss . Clearly, once the system has reached
steady state such a stationary ensemble will represent the system for all times t. Then, as
claimed above, it can be proven that for some ensembles (and, in particular, often for
the orthogonal ensemble) there is no way for an experimenter continually to measure the
environment so as to find out which state the system is in. We say that such ensembles are
not physically realizable (PR). However, there are other stationary ensembles that are PR.

3.8.1 Quantum steering


To appreciate physical realizability of ensembles, it is first necessary to understand a
phenomenon discovered by Schrödinger [Sch35a] and described by him as ‘steering’3 (we
will call it quantum steering). This phenomenon was rediscovered (and generalized) by
Hughston, Jozsa and Wootters [HJW93]. Consider a system with state matrix ρ that is
mixed solely due to its entanglement with a second system, the environment. That is, there
is a pure state | in a larger Hilbert space of system plus environment such that

ρ = Trenv [| |] . (3.106)

This purification always exists, as discussed in Section A.2.2. Then, for any ensemble
{(π̂k , ℘k )}k that represents ρ, it is possible to measure the environment such that the system
state is collapsed into one of the pure states π̂k with probability ℘k . This is sometimes
known as the Schrödinger–HJW theorem.
Quantum steering gives rigorous meaning to the ignorance interpretation of any particular
ensemble. It says that there will be a way to perform a measurement on the environment,
without disturbing the system state on average, to obtain exactly the information as to which
state the system is ‘really’ in. Of course, the fact that one can do this for any ensemble means
that no ensemble can be fundamentally preferred over any other one, as a representation of
ρ at some particular time t. To say that an ensemble is PR, however, requires justifying the
ignorance interpretation at all times (after the system has reached steady state). We now
establish the conditions for an ensemble to be PR.

3
Schrödinger introduced this as an evocative term for the Einstein–Podolsky–Rosen effect [EPR35] involving entangled states.
For a completely general formulation of steering in quantum information terms, see Refs. [WJD07, JWD07].

EQUS
3.8 Preferred ensembles 127

3.8.2 Conditions for physical realizability


According to quantum steering, it is always possible to realize a given ensemble at some
particular time t by measuring the environment. This may involve measuring parts of
the environment that interacted with the system an arbitrarily long time ago, but there
is nothing physically impossible in doing this. Now consider the future evolution of a
particular system state π̂k following this measurement. At time t + τ , it will have evolved
to ρk (t + τ ) = exp(Lτ )π̂k . This is a mixed state because the system has now become
re-entangled with its environment.
The system state can be repurified by making another measurement on its environment.
However, if the same ensemble is to remain as our representation of the system state then
the pure system states obtained as a result of this measurement at time t + τ must be
contained in the set {π̂j : j }. Because of quantum steering, this will be possible if and only
if ρk (t + τ ) can be represented as a mixture
 of these states. That is, for all k there must
exist a probability distribution wj k (τ ) : j such that

exp(Lτ )π̂k = wj k (τ )π̂j . (3.107)
j

If wj k (τ ) exists then it is the probability that the measurement at time t + τ yields the state
π̂j .
Equation (3.107) is a necessary but not sufficient criterion for the ensemble {(π̂j , ℘j ) : j }
to be PR. We also require that the weights be stationary. That is, for all j and all τ ,

℘j = ℘k wj k (τ ). (3.108)
k

Multiplying both sides of Eq. (3.107) by ℘k , and summing over k, then using Eq. (3.108)
and Eq. (3.103) gives eLτ ρss = ρss , as required from the definition of ρss .
One can analyse these conditions further to obtain simple criteria that can be applied
in many cases of interest [WV01]. In particular, we will return to them in Chapter 6.
For the moment, it is sufficient to prove that there are some ensembles that are PR and
some that are not. This is what was called in Ref. [WV01] the preferred-ensemble fact
(the ‘preferred’ ensembles are those that are physically realizable). Moreover, for some
systems the orthogonal ensemble is PR and for others it is not. The models we consider are
chosen for their simplicity (they are two-level systems), and are not realistic models for the
decoherence of a macroscopic apparatus.

3.8.3 Examples
First we consider an example in which the orthogonal ensemble is PR: the high temperature
spin–boson model. In suitably scaled time units, the Lindbladian in Eq. (3.56) is L = D[σ̂z ].
In this example, there is no unique stationary state, but all stationary states are of the form

ρss = ℘− |σz := −1 σz := −1| + ℘+ |σz := 1 σz := 1|. (3.109)

EQUS
128 Open quantum systems

Exercise 3.25 Show this.


The orthogonal ensemble thus consists of the σ̂z eigenstates with weights ℘± . To determine
whether this ensemble is PR, we must consider the evolution of its members under the
Lindbladian. It is trivial to show that L|σz := ±1 σz := ±1| = 0 so that these states do
not evolve at all. In other words, they are perfectly robust, with wj k (τ ) = δj k in Eq. (3.107).
It is easy to see that Eq. (3.108) is also satisfied, so that the orthogonal ensemble is PR.
Next we consider an example in which the orthogonal ensemble is not PR: the driven,
damped two-level atom. In the zero-detuning and zero-temperature limit, the Lindbladian
is defined by

Lρ = −i [σ̂x , ρ] + γ D[σ̂− ]ρ. (3.110)
2
The general solution of the corresponding Bloch equations is

x(t) = ue−(γ /2)t , (3.111)


y(t) = c+ eλ+ t + c− eλ− t + yss , (3.112)
γ − 4i
˜ λ t γ + 4i
˜ λ t
z(t) = c+ e + + c− e − + zss , (3.113)
4 4
with eigenvalues defined by
3
λ± = − γ ± i
˜ (3.114)
4
and c± are constants given by
1 
c± = ∓4(w − zss ) ± (γ ± 4i)(v
˜ − yss ) , (3.115)
˜
8i
where u, v and w are used to represent the initial conditions of x, y and z. A modified Rabi
frequency has been introduced,

˜ = 2 − (γ /4)2 , (3.116)

which is real for  > γ /4 and imaginary for  < γ /4. The steady-state solutions are
xss = 0, yss = 2γ /(γ 2 + 22 ) and zss = −γ 2 /(γ 2 + 22 ), as shown in Exercise 3.10.
Exercise 3.26 Derive the above solution, using standard techniques for linear differential
equations.
In the Bloch representation, the diagonal states of ρss are found by extending the stationary
Bloch vector forwards and backwards to where it intersects the surface of the Bloch sphere.
That is, the two pure diagonal states are
   
u 0
 v  =  ±2  42 + γ 2 −1/2 . (3.117)
w ± ∓γ

EQUS
3.8 Preferred ensembles 129

z 0

1
1
0
y 0
x

Fig. 3.2 Dynamics of two states on the Bloch sphere according to the master equation (3.110), for
 = 10γ , with points every 0.1γ −1 . The initial states are those that diagonalize the stationary Bloch
sphere, which are close to y = ±1. The stationary state is the dot close to the centre of the Bloch
sphere.

Using these as initial conditions, it is easy to prove that, for general t,


     
x(t) u u
 y(t)  = w±+ (t) v  + w±− (t) v  (3.118)
z(t) ± w + w −

for any weights w±+ (t), w±− (t). That is, the diagonal states evolve into states that are not
mixtures of the original diagonal states, so it is not possible for an observer to know at all
times that the system is in a diagonal state. The orthogonal ensemble is not PR. This is
illustrated in Fig. 3.2.
There are, however, non-orthogonal ensembles that are PR for this system. More-
over, there is a PR ensemble with just two members, like the orthogonal ensemble. This
is the ensemble {(π̂+ , 1/2), (π̂− , 1/2)}, where this time the two states have the Bloch
vectors
    
u ± 1 − yss2 − zss2
v = yss . (3.119)
w ± zss

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130 Open quantum systems

Using these as initial conditions, we find


   
x(t) u± e−γ t/2
 y(t)  =  yss . (3.120)
z(t) ± zss

Obviously this can be written as a positively weighted sum of the two initial Bloch vectors,
and averaging over the two initial states will give a sum that remains equal to the stationary
Bloch vector. That is, the two conditions (3.107) and (3.108) are satisfied, and this ensemble
is PR.
Exercise 3.27 Prove the above by explicitly constucting the necessary weights w±+ (t) and
w±− (t).
These results are most easily appreciated in the   γ limit. Then the stationary solution
is an almost maximally mixed state, displaced slightly from the centre of the Bloch sphere
along the y axis. The diagonal states then are close to σ̂y eigenstates, while the states in the
PR ensemble are close to σ̂x eigenstates. In this limit the master-equation evolution (3.110)
is dominated by the Hamiltonian term, which causes the Bloch vector to rotate around the
σ̂x axis. Thus, the y eigenstates are rapidly rotated away from their original positions, so
this ensemble is neither robust nor PR, but the x eigenstates are not rotated at all, and simply
decay at rate γ /2 towards the steady state, along the line joining them. Thus this ensemble
is PR. Moreover, it can be shown [WB00] that this is the most robust ensemble according
to the fidelity measure Eq. (3.104), with a characteristic decay time (half-life) of 2 ln 2/γ .
These features are shown in Fig. 3.3.
The existence of a PR ensemble in this second case (where the simple picture of a
diagonal pointer basis fails) is not happenstance. For any master equation there are in fact
infinitely many PR ensembles. Some of these will be robust, and thus could be considered
pointer bases, and some will not. A full understanding of how PR ensembles arise will
be reached in Chapter 4, where we consider the conditional dynamics of a continuously
observed open system.

3.9 Decoherence in a quantum optical system


3.9.1 Theoretical analysis
In recent years the effects of decoherence have been investigated experimentally, most
notably in a quantum optical (microwave) cavity [BHD+ 96]. To appreciate this experiment,
it is necessary to understand the effect of damping of the electromagnetic field in a cavity at
zero temperature on a variety of initial states. This can be described by the interaction-frame
master equation, Eq. (3.38):

ρ̇ = γ D[â]ρ. (3.121)

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3.9 Decoherence in a quantum optical system 131

z 0

1
1
0
y 0
x

Fig. 3.3 Dynamics of two states on the Bloch sphere according to the master equation (3.110), for
 = 10γ , with points every 0.1γ −1 . The initial states are the two non-orthogonal states π̂± defined
in Eq. (3.119), which are close to x = ±1. The stationary state is the dot close to the centre of the
Bloch sphere.

If we use the solution given in Eq. (3.85) we find that the general solution can be written
as a Kraus sum,


ρ(t) = M̂m (t)ρ(0)M̂m† (t), (3.122)
m=0

where
(1 − e−γ t )m/2 −γ t â † â/2 m
M̂m (t) = √ e â . (3.123)
m!
We can regard this as an expansion of the state matrix in terms of the number of photons
lost from the cavity in time t.
Exercise 3.28 Prove Eq. (3.122) by simplifying Eq. (3.85) using the property that
[â † â, â † ] = â † .
Equation (3.122) can be solved most easily in the number-state basis. However, it is
rather difficult to prepare a simple harmonic oscillator in a number eigenstate. We encounter
simple harmonic oscillators regularly in classical physics; springs, pendula, cantilevers etc.
What type of state describes the kinds of motional states in which such oscillators are

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132 Open quantum systems

typically found? We usually identify simple harmonic motion by observing oscillations. In


the presence of friction oscillatory motion will decay. To observe a sustained oscillation,
we need to provide a driving force to the oscillator. This combination of driving and friction
reaches a steady state of coherent oscillation. In classical physics the resulting motion will
have a definite energy, so one might expect that this would be a means of preparing a quantum
oscillator in an energy eigenstate. However, a number state is actually time-independent, so
this cannot be so. Quantum mechanically, the state produced by this mechanism does not
have a definite energy. For weakly damped oscillators (as in quantum optics), it is actually
a coherent state, as shown in Exercise 3.13. For the reasons just described, the coherent
state is regarded as the most classical state of motion for a simple harmonic oscillator. It is
often referred to as a semiclassical state. Another reason why coherent states are considered
classical-like is their robustness with respect to the decoherence caused by damping.
Exercise 3.29 From Eq. (3.122) show that, for a damped harmonic oscillator in the
interaction frame, a coherent state simply decays exponentially. That is, if |ψ(0) = |α
then |ψ(t) = |αe−γ t/2 .
Hint: Consider the effect of M̂m (t) on a coherent state, using the fact that â|α = α|α and
also using the number-state expansion for |α .
Suppose we somehow managed to prepare a cavity field in a superposition of two coherent
states,
|ψ(0) = N (|α + |β ), (3.124)

where the normalization constant is N −1 = 2 + 2 Re α|β . If |α − β|  1 then this
corresponds to a superposition of macroscopically different fields. Such a superposition is
often called a Schrödinger-cat state, after the thought experiment invented by Schrödinger
which involves a superposition of a live cat and a dead cat [Sch35b].
We now show that such a superposition is very fragile with respect to even a very small
amount of damping. Using the solution (3.122), the state will evolve to
ρ(t) ∝ |α(t) α(t)| + |β(t) β(t)|
+ C(α, β, t)|α(t) β(t)| + C ∗ (α, β, t)|β(t) α(t)|, (3.125)
where α(t) = αe−γ t/2 , β(t) = βe−γ t/2 and
' (
1 ∗
C(α, β, t) = exp − |α(t)| + |β(t)| − 2α(t)β (t) (1 − e ) .
2 2 γt
(3.126)
2
Exercise 3.30 Show this, by the same method as in Exercise 3.29.
The state (3.125) is a superposition of two damped coherent states with amplitudes α(t)
and β(t) with a suppression of coherence between the states through the factor C(α, β, t).
Suppose we now consider times much shorter than the inverse of the amplitude decay rate,
γ t  1. The coherence-suppression factor is then given by
C(α, β, t) ≈ exp −|α − β|2 γ t/2 . (3.127)

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3.9 Decoherence in a quantum optical system 133

C De Dg
α

[ g ( αe iφ + αe iφ )
α g
+ e ( αe iφ αe iφ )[ / 2

R1 S´ R2

Fig. 3.4 A schematic diagram of the experiment performed by the Haroche group to investigate the
decoherence of oscillator coherent states. The atom is prepared in an appropriate Rydberg state.
The cavities R1 and R2 each apply a π/2 pulse. The interaction with the cavity field in C produces
superpositions of coherent states. The final ionization detectors determine the atomic state of the
atom. Figure 2 adapted with permission from M. Brune et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 77, 4887, (1996).
Copyrighted by the American Physical Society.

We thus see that at the very beginning the coherence does not simply decay at the same rate
as the amplitudes, but rather at a decay rate that depends quadratically on the difference
between the amplitudes of the initial superposed states. This is qualitatively the same
as was seen for Brownian motion in Section 3.7.2. For macroscopically different states
(|α − β|  1) the decoherence is very rapid. Once the coherence between the two states
has become very small we can regard the state as a statistical mixture of the two coherent
states with exponentially decaying coherent amplitudes. The quantum character of the
initial superposition is rapidly lost and for all practical purposes we may as well regard the
initial state as a classical statistical mixture of the two ‘pointer states’. For this reason it is
very hard to prepare an oscillator in a Schrödinger-cat state. However, the decoherence we
have described has been observed experimentally for |α − β| ∼ 1.

3.9.2 Experimental observation


The experimental demonstration of the fast decay of coherence for two superposed coherent
states was first performed by the Haroche group in Paris using the cavity QED system of
Rydberg atoms in microwave cavities [BHD+ 96]. The experiment is based on Ramsey
fringe interferometry (see Box 1.4). A schematic diagram of the experiment is shown in
Fig. 3.4.
A two-level atomic system with ground state |g and excited state |e interacts with
a cavity field in C. This cavity field is well detuned from the atomic resonance. The
ground and excited states of the atom correspond to Rydberg levels with principal quantum
numbers 50 and 51. Such highly excited states have very large dipole moments and can

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134 Open quantum systems

thus interact very strongly with the cavity field even though it is well detuned from the
cavity resonance. The effect of the detuned interaction is to change the phase of the field
in the cavity. However, the sign of the phase shift is opposite for each of the atomic states.
Using second-order perturbation theory, an effective Hamiltonian for this interaction can
be derived:
ĤC = χ â † â σ̂z , (3.128)
where σ̂z = |e e| − |g g|, and χ = ||2 /(2δ), where  is the single-photon Rabi fre-
quency and δ = ωa − ωc is the atom–cavity detuning. Thus decreasing the detuning
increases χ (which is desirable), but the detuning cannot be decreased too much or the
description in terms of this effective interaction Hamiltonian becomes invalid.
Assume to begin that the cavity fields R1 and R2 in Fig. 3.4 above are resonant with
√ coherent state |α
the atomic transition. Say the cavity C is initially prepared in a weakly
(in the experiment |α| = 3.1) and the atom in the state (|g + |e )/ 2, using a π/2 pulse
in cavity R1 . Then in time τ the atom–cavity system will evolve under the Hamiltonian
(3.128) to
1
|ψ(τ ) = √ |g |αeiφ + |e |αe−iφ , (3.129)
2
where φ = χ τ/2.
Exercise 3.31 Verify this.
The state in Eq. (3.129) is an entangled state between a two-level system and an oscillator.
Tracing over the atom yields a field state that is an equal mixture of two coherent states
separated in phase by 2φ.
To obtain a state that correlates the atomic energy levels with coherent superpositions of
coherent states, the atom is subjected to another π/2 pulse in cavity R2 . This creates the
final state
1 
|ψ out = √ |g (|αeiφ + |αe−iφ ) + |e (|αeiφ − |αe−iφ ) . (3.130)
2
If one now determines that the atom is in the state |g at the final ionization detectors, the
conditional state of the field is
|ψ g out = N+ (|αeiφ + |αe−iφ ), (3.131)
where N+ is a normalization constant. Likewise, if the atom is detected in the excited state,
|ψ e out = N− (|αeiφ − |αe−iφ ). (3.132)
These conditional states are superpositions of coherent states.
In the preceding discussion we ignored the cavity decay since this is small on the time-
scale of the interaction between a single atom and the cavity field. In order to see the
effect of decoherence, one can use the previous method to prepare the field in a coherent
superposition of coherent states and then let it evolve for a time T so that there is a significant
probability that at least one photon is lost from the cavity. One then needs to probe the

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3.9 Decoherence in a quantum optical system 135

0.2

0.1
η

0.0

0 1 2

Fig. 3.5 A plot of the two-atom correlation η versus the delay time between successive atoms for two
different values of the conditional phase shift. Figure 5(b) adapted with permission from M. Brune et
al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 77, 4887, (1996). Copyrighted by the American Physical Society.

decohered field state. It is impossible to measure directly the state of a microwave cavity
field at the quantum level because of the low energy of microwave photons compared
with optical photons. Instead the Haroche team used a second atom as a probe for the
field state. They then measured the state of the second atom, obtaining the conditional
probabilities p(e|g) and p(e|e) (where the conditioning label refers to the result of the first
atom measurement). Since the respective conditional field states after the first atom are
different, these probabilities should be different. The extent of the difference is given by

η = p(e|e) − p(e|g). (3.133)

From the result (3.125), after a time τ the two conditional states will have decohered to
g
e
ρout (τ ) ∝ |ατ eiφ ατ eiφ | + |ατ e−iφ ατ e−iφ |
± C(τ )|ατ eiφ ατ e−iφ | + C(τ )∗ |ατ e−iφ ατ eiφ | , (3.134)

where ατ < α due to decay in the coherent amplitude and |C(τ )| < 1 due to the decay
in the coherences as before. In the limit C(τ ) → 0, these two states are indistinguishable
and so η → 0. Thus, by repeating a sequence of double-atom experiments, the relevant
conditional probabilities may be sampled and a value of η as a function of the delay time
can be determined. (In the experiment, an extra averaging was performed to determine
η, involving detuning the cavities R1 and R2 from atomic resonance ω0 by a varying
amount .)
In Fig. 3.5 we reproduce the results of the experimental determination of η for two
different values of the conditional phase shift, φ, as a function of the delay time τ in units

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136 Open quantum systems

of cavity relaxation lifetime Tr = 1/γ . As expected, the correlation signal decays to zero.
Furthermore, it decays to zero more rapidly for larger conditional phase shifts. That is to say,
it decays to zero more rapidly when the superposed states are further apart in phase-space.
The agreement with the theoretical result is very good.

3.10 Other examples of decoherence


3.10.1 Quantum electromechanical systems
We now consider a simple model of a measured system in which the apparatus undergoes
decoherence due to its environment. In the model the measured system is a two-level system
(with basis states |0 and |1 ) while the apparatus is a simple harmonic oscillator, driven
on resonance by a classical force. The coupling between the two-level system and the
oscillator is assumed to change the frequency of the oscillator. The effective Hamiltonian
for the system plus apparatus in the interaction frame is

Ĥ = (â † + â) + χ â † â σ̂z , (3.135)

where is the strength of the resonant driving force and χ is the strength of the coupling
between the oscillator and the two-level system. The irreversible dynamics of the apparatus
is modelled using the weak-damping, zero-temperature master equation of Eq. (3.121),
giving the master equation

ρ̇ = −i [â + â † , ρ] − iχ [â † â σ̂z , ρ] + γ D[â]ρ. (3.136)

There are numerous physical problems that could be described by this model. It could
represent a two-level electric dipole system interacting with an electromagnetic cavity field
that is far detuned, as can occur in cavity QED (see the preceding Section 3.9.2) and
circuit QED (see the following Section 3.10.2). Another realization comes from the rapidly
developing field of quantum electromechanical systems, as we now discuss.
Current progress in the fabrication of nano-electromechanical systems (NEMSs) will
soon yield mechanical oscillators with resonance frequencies close to 1 GHz, and quality
factors Q above 105 [SR05]. (The quality factor is defined as the ratio of the resonance
frequency ω0 to the damping rate γ .) At that scale, a NEMS oscillator becomes a quantum
electromechanical system (QEMS). One way to define the quantum limit is for the thermal
excitation energy to be less than the energy gap between adjacent oscillator energy eigen-
states: ω0 > kB T . This inequality would be satisfied by a factor of two or so with a device
having resonance frequency ω0 = 1 × 2π GHz and temperature of T0 = 20 mK.
In this realization, the two-level system or qubit could be a solid-state double-well
structure with a single electron tunnelling between the wells (quantum dots). We will
model this as an approximate two-state system. It is possible to couple the quantum-
electromechanical oscillator to the charge state of the double dot via an external voltage
gate. A possible device is shown in Fig. 3.6. The two wells are at different distances from the
voltage gate and this distance is modulated as the oscillator moves. The electrostatic energy

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3.10 Other examples of decoherence 137

d
1 2

DOUBLE QUANTUM DOT


2
1

L
Q

Vg

Fig. 3.6 A possible scheme for coupling a single-electron double-dot system to a nano-mechanical
resonator. The double dot is idealized as a double-well potential for a single electron.

of the system depends on which well is occupied by the electron and on the square of the
oscillator displacement. This leads to a shift in the frequency of the oscillator that depends
on the location of the electron [CR98]. Currently such nano-mechanical electrometers are
strongly dominated by thermal fluctuations and the irreversible dynamics are not well
described by the decay term in Eq. (3.136). However, if quality factors and resonance
frequencies continue to increase, these devices should enter a domain of operation where
this description is acceptable.
At any time the state of the system plus apparatus may be written as

ρ(t) = ρ00 ⊗ |0 0| + ρ11 ⊗ |1 1| + ρ10 ⊗ |1 0| + ρ10 ⊗ |0 1|, (3.137)

where ρij is an operator that acts only in the oscillator Hilbert space. If we substitute this
into Eq. (3.136), we find the following equations:

ρ̇ 00 = −i [â + â † , ρ00 ] + iχ [â † â, ρ00 ] + γ D[â]ρ00 , (3.138)


† †
ρ̇ 11 = −i [â + â , ρ11 ] − iχ [â â, ρ11 ] + γ D[â]ρ11 , (3.139)
ρ̇ 10 = −i [â + â † , ρ10 ] − iχ {â † â, ρ10 } + γ D[â]ρ10 , (3.140)

where {Â, B̂} = ÂB̂ + B̂ Â as usual. On solving these equations for the initial condition of
an arbitary qubit state c0 |0 + c1 |1 and the oscillator in the ground state, we find that the
combined state of the system plus apparatus is

ρ(t) = |c0 |2 |α− (t) α− (t)| ⊗ |0 0| + |c1 |2 |α+ (t) α+ (t)| ⊗ |1 1|



+ c0 c1∗ C(t)|α+ (t) α− (t)| ⊗ |1 0| + H.c. , (3.141)

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138 Open quantum systems

where |α± (t) are coherent states with amplitudes


−i 
α± (t) = 1 − ei−(γ /2±iχ )t . (3.142)
γ /2 ± iχ
The coherence factor C(t) has a complicated time dependence, but tends to zero as t → ∞.
Thus the two orthogonal states of the measured qubit become classically correlated with
different coherent states of the apparatus. The latter are the pointer basis states of the
apparatus, and may be approximately orthogonal. Even if they are not orthogonal, it can be
seen that the qubit state becomes diagonal in the eigenbasis of σ̂z .
For short times C(t) decays as an exponential of a quadratic function of time. Such a
quadratic dependence is typical for coherence decay in a measurement model that relies
upon an initial build up of correlations between the measured system and the pointer
degree of freedom. For long times (γ t  1), the coherence decays exponentially in time:
C(t) ∼ e−t . The rate of decoherence is
2 2γ χ 2
= . (3.143)
(γ 2 /4 + χ 2 )2
This qubit decoherence rate can be understood as follows. The long-time solution of
Eq. (3.141) is
ρ∞ = |c0 |2 |α− α− | ⊗ |0 0| + |c1 |2 |α+ α+ | ⊗ |1 1| (3.144)
with α± = −i (γ /2 ± iχ )−1 .
Exercise 3.32 Verify by direct substitution that this is a steady-state solution of the master
equation (3.136).
The square separation S = |α− − α+ |2 between the two possible oscillator amplitudes in
the steady state is given by
4 2χ 2
S= . (3.145)
(γ 2 /4 + χ 2 )2
Thus the long-time decoherence rate is  = Sγ /2. This is essentially the rate at which
information about which oscillator state is occupied (and hence which qubit state is occu-
pied) is leaking into the oscillator’s environment through the damping at rate γ . If S  1,
then the decoherence rate is much faster than the rate at which the oscillator is damped.

3.10.2 A superconducting box


The international effort to develop a quantum computer in a solid-state system is driving
a great deal of fundamental research on the problem of decoherence. Recent experiments
have begun to probe the mechanisms of decoherence in single solid-state quantum devices,
particularly superconducting devices. In this section we will consider the physical mecha-
nisms of decoherence in these devices and recent experiments. A superconducting box or
Cooper-pair box (CPB) is essentially a small island of superconducting material separated

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3.10 Other examples of decoherence 139

TUNNEL
Cg BARRIER

Vg

ISLAND
φx

TUNNEL
BARRIER

Fig. 3.7 A Cooper-pair box system. A superconducting metallic island is connected to a Cooper pair
reservoir by a split tunnel junction, threaded by a magnetic flux φx . A DC bias gate with voltage Vg
can make it energetically favourable for one or more Cooper-pairs to tunnel onto the island.

by a tunnel barrier from a reservoir of Cooper pairs. A Cooper pair (CP) is a pair of electrons
bound together due to complex interactions with the lattice of the superconducting material
[Coo56, BCS57]. Although electrons are fermions, a pair of electrons acts like a boson,
and so can be described similarly to photons, using number states |N for N ∈ N.
A schematic representation of a CPB is shown in Fig. 3.7. The box consists of a small
superconducting metallic island with oxide barrier tunnel junctions insulating it from the
Cooper-pair reservoir. As the voltage Vg on the bias gate is changed, one or more Cooper
pairs may tunnel onto the island. The tunnelling rate is determined by the Josephson energy
EJ of the junction. This can be changed by adjusting the magnetic flux φx threading the
loop: a so-called split-junction CPB.
In the experiment of Schuster et al. [SWB+ 05] the CPB was placed inside a supercon-
ducting co-planar microwave LC-resonator. The resonator supports a quantized mode of
the electromagnetic field, while the CPB acts like an atomic system. Thus the term ‘circuit
QED’ (as opposed to the ‘cavity QED’ of Section 3.9.2) is used for these systems. The
coupling between the CPB and the microwave field is given by
EJ 
Ĥ = ωr â † â − |N N + 1| + |N + 1 N|
2 N

+ 4EC (N − n̂g )2 |N N|. (3.146)
N

In the first term, ωr = LC is the frequency and â the annihilation operator for the
microwave resonator field (note that in this section we are not setting  = 1). The second
term is the Josephson tunnelling term, with Josephson frequency EJ /. The third term is
the coupling between the field and the CPB, in which EC = e2 /(2C! ) and n̂g = Cg V̂g /(2e).
Here C! is the capacitance between the island and the rest of the circuit, Cg is the capacitance
between the CPB island and the bias gate for the island, and V̂g is the operator for the total
voltage applied to the island by the bias gate. This voltage can be split as V̂g = Vg(0) + v̂,

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140 Open quantum systems

where Vg(0) is a DC field and v̂ is the microwave field in the cavity, which is quantized. It is
related to the cavity annihilation operator by

v̂ = (â + â † ) ωr /(2C). (3.147)
We can thus write
n̂g = n(0)
g + δn̂g ; δn̂g (t) = [Cg /(2e)]v̂(t). (3.148)
For δn̂g small, we can choose the bias n(0) g such that the CPB never has more than one
CP on it at any time. That is, we can restrict the Hilbert space to the N ∈ {0, 1} subspace,
and write the Hamiltonian as
EJ
ωr â † â − 2EC (1 − 2n(0)
g )σ̂z − σ̂z − 4EC δn̂g (t)(1 − 2n(0)
g − σ̂x ). (3.149)
2
Here (differing from the usual convention) we have defined σ̂x = |0 0| − |1 1| and σ̂z =
|1 0| + |0 1|. If one chooses to operate at the charge-degeneracy point, n(0) g = 1/2, the
Hamiltonian takes the form
Ĥ = ωr â † â + ωa σ̂z /2 − g(â + â † )σ̂x , (3.150)
where
)
Cg ωr EJ
g=e , ωa = . (3.151)
C! LC 
Defining Ĥ0 = ωa (â † â + σ̂z /2), we move to an interaction frame with respect to this
Hamiltonian, and make a rotating-wave approximation as usual. The new Hamiltonian is
V̂ = â † â + g(â σ̂+ + â † σ̂− ), (3.152)
with  = ωr − ωa the detuning between the circuit frequency and the CPB tunnelling
frequency. It is assumed to be small compared with ωa . We can, however, still consider
a detuning that is large compared with g. Treating the second term in Eq. (3.152) as a
perturbation on the first term, it is possible to show using second-order perturbation theory
that Eq. (3.152) may be approximated by the effective Hamiltonitan
V̂eff = â † â + χ â † â σ̂z , (3.153)
where χ = g 2 /. Moving frames again to the cavity resonance, and including a resonant
microwave driving field , gives a Hamiltonian with the same form as Eq. (3.135).
Schuster et al. [SWB+ 05] recently implemented this system experimentally and mea-
sured the measurement-induced qubit dephasing rate given in Eq. (3.143). In their exper-
iment, /(2π) = 100 MHz, g/(2π ) = 5.8 MHz and the cavity decay rate was γ /(2π ) =
0.8 MHz. Schoelkopf’s team used a second probe microwave field tuned to the CPB reso-
nance to induce coherence in the qubit basis. The measurement-induced decoherence time
then appears as a broadening of the spectrum representing the response of the qubit to
the probe. This spectrum is related to the norm squared of the Fourier transform of the
coherence function in time. The results are found to be in good agreement with the theory

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3.11 Heisenberg-picture dynamics 141

presented here for small χ . Although the decay of coherence is exponential for long times
with rate (3.143), for short times the decoherence is quadratic in time. This is manifested
experimentally in the line shape of the probe absorption spectrum: the line shape deviates
from the usual Lorentzian shape (corresponding to exponential decay) in its wings.

3.11 Heisenberg-picture dynamics


We saw in Section 1.3.2 that quantum dynamics, and even quantum measurement, can be
formulated in the Heisenberg picture. It is thus not surprising that there is a Heisenberg-
picture formulation for master equations. This formulation is sometimes called the quantum
stochastic differential-equation technique, or the quantum Langevin approach [GC85] (after
Paul Langevin, who developed the corresponding theory of classical stochastic differential
equations early in the twentieth century [Lan08]). In this section we will develop the
Heisenberg-picture description for a system coupled to a bosonic (harmonic-oscillator)
bath. We will show how the Markovian limit can be elegantly formulated in the Heisenberg
picture, and used to derive a Lindblad-form master equation.
Consider the interaction-frame coupling Hamiltonian in the rotating-wave approximation
(3.24) derived in Section 3.3.1

V̂IF (t) = −i[b̂(z := −t)ĉ† − b̂† (z := −t)ĉ], (3.154)

where

b̂(z) = γ −1/2 gk b̂k e+iδk z , (3.155)
k

where δk is the detuning of the bath mode k from the system, γ is the dissipation rate, and,

as in the example of Section 3.3.1, iĉ is the system lowering operator multiplied by γ .
We use z, rather than t, as the argument of b̂ for two reasons. The first is that b̂(z := −t)
is not at this stage a Heisenberg-picture operator. Rather, the interaction Hamiltonian is
time-dependent because we are working in the interaction frame, and the operator b̂(z) is
defined simply to make V̂IF (t) simple in form. The second reason is that in some quantum-
optical situations, such as the damping of a cavity mode at a single mirror, it is possible
to consider the electromagnetic field modes which constitute the bath as being functions
of one spatial direction only. On defining the speed of light in vacuo to be unity, and the
origin as the location of the mirror, we have that, at time t = 0, b̂(z) relates to the bath at
position |z| away from the mirror. For z < 0 it represents a property of the incoming field,
and for z > 0 it represents a property of the outgoing field. That is, b̂(z := −t) represents
the field that will interact (for t > 0) or has interacted (for t < 0) with the system at time
t. An explanation of this may be found in many textbooks, such as that of Gardiner and
Zoller [GZ04].
Now, in the limit of a continuum bath as considered in Section 3.3.1, we find that

[b̂(z), b̂† (z )] = γ −1 (z − z ). (3.156)

EQUS
142 Open quantum systems

In order to derive a Markovian master equation, it was necessary to assume that (τ ) was
sharply peaked at τ = 0. Ignoring the Lamb shift in Eq. (3.30), and taking the Markovian
limit, we obtain

[b̂(z), b̂† (z )] = δ(z − z ). (3.157)

Physically, this result cannot be exact because the bath modes all have positive frequency.
Also, one must be careful using this result because of the singularity of the δ-function.
Nevertheless, it is the result that must be used to obtain a strict correspondence with a
Markovian master equation.
Before moving to the Heisenberg picture, it is useful to define the unitary operator for
an infinitesimal evolution generated by Eq. (3.154):
 

Û (t + dt, t) = exp ĉd B̂z:=−t − ĉ† d B̂z:=−t . (3.158)

Here we have defined a new infinitesimal operator,

dB̂z = b̂(z)dt. (3.159)

The point of defining this infinitesimal is that, although it appears to be of order


√ dt, because
of the singularity of the commutation relation (3.157), it is actually of order dt. This can
be seen by calculating its commutation relations

[dB̂z , dB̂z† ] = dt, (3.160)

where we have used the heuristic equation δ(0)dt = 1. This can be understood by thinking
of dt as the smallest unit into which time can be divided. Then the discrete approximation
to a δ-function is a function which is zero everywhere except for an interval of size dt
around
√ zero, where it equals δ(0) = 1/dt (so that its area is unity). Because dB̂z is of order
dt, it is necessary to expand Û (t + dt, t) to second rather than first order in its argument.
That is,
! "
† †
Û (t + dt, t) = 1̂ + ĉ dB̂z:=−t − ĉ† dB̂z:=−t − 12 ĉ† ĉ dt − 12 {ĉ† , ĉ}dB̂z:=−t dB̂z:=−t
! "2
† 2
+ 12 ĉ2 dB̂z:=−t + 12 (ĉ† )2 dB̂z:=−t . (3.161)

Exercise 3.33 Show this, using Eq. (3.160).

3.11.1 Quantum Langevin equations


To obtain the Heisenberg-picture dynamics of the system, one might think that all one need
do is to write down the usual Heisenberg equations of motion (in the interaction frame)
generated by the Hamiltonian (3.154). That is, for an arbitrary system operator ŝ,
dŝ(t)
= [b̂(z := −t, t)ĉ† (t) − b̂† (z := −t, t)ĉ(t), ŝ(t)], (3.162)
dt

EQUS
3.11 Heisenberg-picture dynamics 143

where now b̂(z, t) is also time-dependent through the evolution of b̂k (t) in the Heisenberg
picture. However, because of the singularity of the commutation relation (3.157), the
situation is not so simple. The approach we will follow is different from that in most texts.
It has the advantage of being simple to follow and of having a close relation to an analogous
approach in classical Markovian stochastic differential equations. For a detailed discussion,
see Appendix B.
In our approach, to find the correct Heisenberg equations one proceeds as follows (note
that all unitaries are in the interaction frame as usual):

ŝ(t + dt) = Û † (t + dt, t0 )ŝ(t0 )Û (t + dt, t0 ) (3.163)


= Û † (t, t0 )Û † (t + dt, t)ŝ(t0 )Û (t + dt, t)Û (t, t0 ) (3.164)

= ÛHP (t + dt, t)ŝ(t)ÛHP (t + dt, t), (3.165)

where ŝ(t) = Û † (t, t0 )ŝ(t0 )Û (t, t0 ) and

ÛHP (t + dt, t) ≡ Û † (t, t0 )Û (t + dt, t)Û (t, t0 ). (3.166)

Here we are (just for the moment) using the subscript HP to denote that Eq. (3.166) is
obtained by replacing the operators appearing in Û (t + dt, t) by their Heisenberg-picture
versions at time t. If we were to expand the exponential in ÛHP (t + dt, t) to first order in its
argument, we would simply reproduce Eq. (3.162). As motivated above, this will not work,
and instead we must use the second-order expansion as in Eq. (3.161). First we define

dB̂in (t) ≡ dB̂z:=−t (t), (3.167)

and b̂in (t) similarly. These are known as input field operators. Note that as usual the
t-argument on the right-hand side indicates that here dB̂z:=−t is in the Heisenberg picture.
Because of the bath commutation relation (3.157), this operator is unaffected by any

evolution prior to time t, since dB̂in (t) commutes with dB̂in (t) for non-equal times. Thus
we could equally well have defined

dB̂in (t) ≡ dB̂z:=−t (t  ), ∀t  ≤ t. (3.168)

In particular, if t  = t0 , the initial time for the problem, then dB̂in (t) is the same as the
Schrödinger-picture operator dB̂z:=−t appearing in Û (t + dt, t) of Eq. (3.158).
If the bath is initially in the vacuum state, this leads to a significant simplification, as
we will now explain. Ultimately we are interested in calculating the average of system (or
bath) operators. In the Heisenberg picture, such an average is given by

ŝ(t) = Tr[ŝ(t)ρS ⊗ ρB ] = TrS [ 0|ŝ(t)|0 ρS ], (3.169)

where |0 is the vacuum bath state and ρS is the initial system state. Since dB̂in (t)|0 = 0 for

all t, any expression involving dB̂in (t) and dB̂in (t) that is in normal order (see Section A.5)
will contribute nothing to the average. Thus it is permissible to drop all normally ordered
terms in Eq. (3.161) that are of second order in dB̂in (t). That is to say, we can drop all

EQUS
144 Open quantum systems

second-order terms in dB̂in (t) in Eq. (3.161) because we have already used

dB̂in (t)dB̂in† (t) = [dB̂in (t), dB̂in† (t)] + dB̂in† (t)dB̂in (t) = dt (3.170)

to obtain the non-zero second-order term − 12 ĉ† ĉ dt in Eq. (3.161).


Although they do not contribute to dŝ(t) , first-order terms in the input field operator
must be kept because they will in general contribute (via a non-normally ordered product)
to the change in an operator product such as d(r̂ ŝ) . That is because, not surprisingly, one
must consider second-order corrections to the usual product rule:

d(r̂ ŝ) = (dr̂)ŝ + r̂(dŝ) + (dr̂)(dŝ). (3.171)

One thus obtains from Eq. (3.165) the following Heisenberg equation of motion in the
interaction frame:
 
dŝ = dt ĉ† ŝ ĉ − 1
2
ĉ† ĉ, ŝ + i[Ĥ , ŝ] − [dB̂in† (t)ĉ − ĉ† dB̂in (t), ŝ]. (3.172)

Here we have dropped the time arguments from all operators except the input bath operators.
We have also included a system Hamiltonian Ĥ , as could arise from having a non-zero
V̂S , or a Lamb-shift term, as discussed in Section 3.3.1. Remember that we are still in
the interaction frame – Ĥ here is not the same as the Ĥ = Ĥ0 + V̂ for the system plus
environment with which we started the calculation.
We will refer to Eq. (3.172) as a quantum Langevin equation (QLE) for ŝ. The operator
ŝ may be a system operator or it may be a bath operator. Because b̂in (t) is the bath operator
before it interacts with the system, it is independent of the system operator ŝ(t). Hence for
system operators one can derive
* +
dŝ  
= ĉ† ŝ ĉ − 12 ĉ† ĉŝ − 12 ŝ ĉ† ĉ + i[Ĥ , ŝ] . (3.173)
dt

Although the noise terms in (3.172) do not contribute to Eq. (3.173), they are necessary in
order for Eq. (3.172) to be a valid Heisenberg equation of motion. If they are omitted then
the operator algebra of the system will not be preserved.

Exercise 3.34 Show this. For specificity, consider the case ĉ = γ â, where â is an annihi-
lation operator, and show that, unless these terms are included, [â(t), â † (t)] will not remain
equal to unity.
The master equation. Note that Eq. (3.173) is Markovian, depending only on the average
of system operators at the same time. Therefore, it should be derivable from a Markovian
evolution equation for the system in the Schrödinger picture. That is to say, there should
exist a master equation for the system state matrix such that

˙
s(t) = Tr[ŝρ̇(t)]. (3.174)

EQUS
3.11 Heisenberg-picture dynamics 145

Here, the placement of the time argument indicates the picture (Heisenberg or Schrödinger).
By inspection of Eq. (3.173), the corresponding master equation is

ρ̇ = D[ĉ]ρ − i[Ĥ , ρ]. (3.175)

As promised, this is of the Lindblad form.

3.11.2 Generalization for a non-vacuum bath


The above derivation relied upon the assumption that the bath was initially in the vacuum
state |0 . However, it turns out that there are other bath states for which it is possible
to derive a Markovian QLE and hence a Markovian master equation. This generalization
includes a bath with thermal noise and a bath with so-called broad-band squeezing. Instead

of the equation dB̂in (t)dB̂in (t) = dt, with all other second-order products ignorable and all
first-order terms being zero on average, we have in the general case

dB̂in† (t)dB̂in (t) = N dt, (3.176)


dB̂in (t)dB̂in† (t) = (N + 1)dt, (3.177)
dB̂in (t)dB̂in (t) = M dt, (3.178)
 
dB̂in (t) = β dt, (3.179)

while Eq. (3.160) still holds. The parameter N is positive, while M and β are complex,
with M constrained by

|M|2 ≤ N (N + 1). (3.180)

This type of input field is sometimes called a white-noise field, because the bath correlations
are δ-correlated in time. That is, they are flat (like the spectrum of white light) in frequency
space. A thermal bath is well approximated by a white-noise bath with M = 0 and N =
{exp[ω0 /(kB T )] − 1}−1 , where ω0 is the frequency of the system’s free oscillation. Only
a pure squeezed (or vacuum) bath attains the equality in Eq. (3.180).
Using these rules in expanding the unitary operator in Eq. (3.165) gives the following
general QLE for a white-noise bath:
1
dŝ = i dt[Ĥ , ŝ] + (N + 1)(2ĉ† ŝ ĉ − ŝ ĉ† ĉ − ĉ† ĉŝ) + N (2ĉŝ ĉ† − ŝ ĉĉ† − ĉĉ† ŝ)
2

+ M[ĉ† , [ĉ† , ŝ]] + M ∗ [ĉ, [ĉ, ŝ]] dt − [dB̂in† ĉ − ĉ† dB̂in , ŝ].
(3.181)

Here we have dropped time arguments but are still (obviously) working in the Heisenberg
picture.
Exercise 3.35 Derive Eq. (3.181).

EQUS
146 Open quantum systems

The corresponding master equation is evidently


M † † M∗
ρ̇ = (N + 1)D[ĉ]ρ + N D[ĉ† ]ρ + [ĉ , [ĉ , ρ]] + [ĉ, [ĉ, ρ]]
2 2
− i[Ĥ + i(β ∗ ĉ − β ĉ† ), ρ]. (3.182)

Note that the effect of the non-zero mean field (3.179) is simply to add a driving term to the
existing system Hamiltonian Ĥ . Although not obviously of the Lindblad form, Eq. (3.182)
can be written in that form, with three irreversible terms, as long as Eq. (3.180) holds.
Exercise 3.36 Show this.
Hint: Define N  such that |M|2 = N  (N  + 1) and consider three Lindblad operators
proportional to ĉ, ĉ† and [ĉ(N  + M ∗ + 1) − ĉ† (N  + M)].

3.12 Further reading


There is a large and growing literature on describing the evolution of open quantum systems,
both with and without the Markovian assumption. For a review, see the book by Breuer and
Petruccione [BP02]. One of the interesting developments since that book was published is
the derivation [PV05] of a Markovian master equation for Brownian motion starting from
Einstein’s original concept of Brownian motion. That is, instead of considering a particle
coupled to a bath of harmonic oscillators, a massive particle is made to suffer collisions
by being immersed in a bath of less massive particles in thermal equilibrium. Building on
the work of Diósi [Dió93], Petruccione and Vacchini [PV05] have rigorously derived a
Lindblad-form master equation that involves diffusion in position as well as momentum.
As we have discussed, the Lindblad form is the only form of a Markovian master
equation that corresponds to a completely positive map for the state. The question of which
non-Markovian master equations give rise to completely positive evolution has recently
been addressed by Andersson, Cresser and Hall [ACH07]. They consider time-local non-
Markovian master equations; that is, master equations with time-dependent coefficients
such as those we discussed in Section 3.4. For finite-dimensional systems, they show how
the state map for any time may be constructed from the master equation, and give a simple
test for complete positivity. Conversely, they show that any continuous time-dependent map
can be turned into a master equation.
In this chapter we have discussed master equations for systems that can exchange exci-
tations with both fermionic and bosonic baths. However, when presenting the Heisenberg-
picture dynamics (quantum Langevin equations) we considered only the case of a bosonic
bath. The reason is that there is an important technical issue due to the anticommutation
relations between the fermionic driving field and those system operators which can change
the number of fermions within the system. This problem has been addressed in a recent
paper by Gardiner [Gar04].
The decoherence ‘programme’ described briefly in Section 3.7 has been reviewed
recently by Zurek, one of its chief proponents [Zur03]. For an excellent discussion of

EQUS
3.12 Further reading 147

some of the conceptual issues surrounding decoherence and the quantum measurement
problem, see the recent review by Schlosshauer [Sch04]. For an extensive investigation
of physically realizable ensembles and robustness for various open quantum systems
see Refs. [WV02a, WV02b, ABJW05]. Finally, we note that an improved version of the
Schrödinger-cat decoherence experiment of Section 3.9.2 has been performed, also by the
Haroche group. The new results [DDS+ 08] allow reconstruction of the whole quantum
state (specifically, its Wigner function – see Section A.5), showing the rapid vanishing of
its nonclassical features under damping.

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