Litcius/Paper detail

Designing open quantum systems with known steady states: Davies generators and beyond

Jinkang Guo, Oliver Hart, Chi-Fang Chen, Aaron J. Friedman, Andrew Lucas

2025Quantum15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

We provide a systematic framework for constructing generic models of nonequilibrium quantum dynamics with a target stationary (mixed) state. Our framework identifies (almost) all combinations of Hamiltonian and dissipative dynamics that relax to a steady state of interest, generalizing the Davies’ generator for dissipative relaxation at finite temperature to nonequilibrium dynamics targeting arbitrary stationary states. We focus on Gibbs states of stabilizer Hamiltonians, identifying local Lindbladians compatible therewith by constraining the rates of dissipative and unitary processes. Moreover, given terms in the Lindbladian not compatible with the target state, our formalism identifies the operations – including syndrome measurements and local feedback – one must apply to correct these errors. Our methods also reveal new models of quantum dynamics: for example, we provide a “measurement-induced phase transition” in which measurable two-point functions exhibit critical (power-law) scaling with distance at a critical ratio of the transverse field and rate of measurement and feedback. Time-reversal symmetry – defined naturally within our formalism – can be broken both in effectively classical and intrinsically quantum ways. Our framework provides a systematic starting point for exploring the landscape of dynamical universality classes in open quantum systems, as well as identifying new protocols for quantum error correction.

Topics & Concepts

Dissipative systemStatistical physicsQuantumPhysicsUnitary stateNon-equilibrium thermodynamicsHamiltonian (control theory)Stationary stateOpen quantum systemUniversality (dynamical systems)Theoretical physicsClassical mechanicsQuantum mechanicsMathematicsMathematical optimizationPolitical scienceLawAdvanced Thermodynamics and Statistical MechanicsSpectroscopy and Quantum Chemical StudiesQuantum many-body systems