4.6 Article

Solving quasi-free and quadratic Lindblad master equations for open fermionic and bosonic systems

Journal

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.1088/1742-5468/ac8e5c

Keywords

quantum dissipative systems; rigorous results in statistical mechanics; Lindblad master equation; nonequilibrium dynamics

Funding

  1. US Department of Energy [DE-SC0019449]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This article investigates the dynamics of Markovian open quantum systems, deriving the equation of motion for the covariance matrix in quasi-free systems. The use of ladder super-operators allows for the transformation of the Liouvillian to a many-body Jordan normal form, uncovering the full many-body spectrum. The article extends previous work, treating fermionic and bosonic systems equally and covering additional phenomena such as non-diagonalizable Liouvillians and quadratic systems.
The dynamics of Markovian open quantum systems are described by Lindblad master equations. For fermionic and bosonic systems that are quasi-free, i.e. with Hamiltonians that are quadratic in the ladder operators and Lindblad operators that are linear in the ladder operators, we derive the equation of motion for the covariance matrix. This determines the evolution of Gaussian initial states and the steady states, which are also Gaussian. Using ladder super-operators (a.k.a. third quantization), we show how the Liouvillian can be transformed to a many-body Jordan normal form which also reveals the full many-body spectrum. Extending previous work by Prosen and Seligman, we treat fermionic and bosonic systems on equal footing with Majorana operators, shorten and complete some derivations, also address the odd-parity sector for fermions, give a criterion for the existence of bosonic steady states, cover non-diagonalizable Liouvillians also for bosons, and include quadratic systems. In extension of the quasi-free open systems, quadratic open systems comprise additional Hermitian Lindblad operators that are quadratic in the ladder operators. While Gaussian states may then evolve into non-Gaussian states, the Liouvillian can still be transformed to a useful block-triangular form, and the equations of motion for k-point Green's functions form a closed hierarchy. Based on this formalism, results on criticality and dissipative phase transitions in such models are discussed in a companion paper.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available