Hitting statistics from quantum jumps

We define the hitting time for a model of continuous-time open quantum walks in terms of quantum jumps. Our starting point is a master equation in Lindblad form, which can be taken as the quantum analogue of the rate equation for a classical continuous-time Markov chain. The quantum jump method is w...

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Main Authors: A. Chia, T. Paterek, L. C. Kwek
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Verein zur Förderung des Open Access Publizierens in den Quantenwissenschaften 2017-07-01
Series:Quantum
Online Access:https://quantum-journal.org/q-2017-07-21-19/pdf/
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spelling doaj-d862ac6395da49318ef2dd922b044fbf2020-11-25T01:39:03ZengVerein zur Förderung des Open Access Publizierens in den QuantenwissenschaftenQuantum2521-327X2017-07-0111910.22331/q-2017-07-21-1910.22331/q-2017-07-21-19Hitting statistics from quantum jumpsA. ChiaT. PaterekL. C. KwekWe define the hitting time for a model of continuous-time open quantum walks in terms of quantum jumps. Our starting point is a master equation in Lindblad form, which can be taken as the quantum analogue of the rate equation for a classical continuous-time Markov chain. The quantum jump method is well known in the quantum optics community and has also been applied to simulate open quantum walks in discrete time. This method however, is well-suited to continuous-time problems. It is shown here that a continuous-time hitting problem is amenable to analysis via quantum jumps: The hitting time can be defined as the time of the first jump. Using this fact, we derive the distribution of hitting times and explicit exressions for its statistical moments. Simple examples are considered to illustrate the final results. We then show that the hitting statistics obtained via quantum jumps is consistent with a previous definition for a measured walk in discrete time [Phys. Rev. A 73, 032341 (2006)] (when generalised to allow for non-unitary evolution and in the limit of small time steps). A caveat of the quantum-jump approach is that it relies on the final state (the state which we want to hit) to share only incoherent edges with other vertices in the graph. We propose a simple remedy to restore the applicability of quantum jumps when this is not the case and show that the hitting-time statistics will again converge to that obtained from the measured discrete walk in appropriate limits.https://quantum-journal.org/q-2017-07-21-19/pdf/
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author A. Chia
T. Paterek
L. C. Kwek
spellingShingle A. Chia
T. Paterek
L. C. Kwek
Hitting statistics from quantum jumps
Quantum
author_facet A. Chia
T. Paterek
L. C. Kwek
author_sort A. Chia
title Hitting statistics from quantum jumps
title_short Hitting statistics from quantum jumps
title_full Hitting statistics from quantum jumps
title_fullStr Hitting statistics from quantum jumps
title_full_unstemmed Hitting statistics from quantum jumps
title_sort hitting statistics from quantum jumps
publisher Verein zur Förderung des Open Access Publizierens in den Quantenwissenschaften
series Quantum
issn 2521-327X
publishDate 2017-07-01
description We define the hitting time for a model of continuous-time open quantum walks in terms of quantum jumps. Our starting point is a master equation in Lindblad form, which can be taken as the quantum analogue of the rate equation for a classical continuous-time Markov chain. The quantum jump method is well known in the quantum optics community and has also been applied to simulate open quantum walks in discrete time. This method however, is well-suited to continuous-time problems. It is shown here that a continuous-time hitting problem is amenable to analysis via quantum jumps: The hitting time can be defined as the time of the first jump. Using this fact, we derive the distribution of hitting times and explicit exressions for its statistical moments. Simple examples are considered to illustrate the final results. We then show that the hitting statistics obtained via quantum jumps is consistent with a previous definition for a measured walk in discrete time [Phys. Rev. A 73, 032341 (2006)] (when generalised to allow for non-unitary evolution and in the limit of small time steps). A caveat of the quantum-jump approach is that it relies on the final state (the state which we want to hit) to share only incoherent edges with other vertices in the graph. We propose a simple remedy to restore the applicability of quantum jumps when this is not the case and show that the hitting-time statistics will again converge to that obtained from the measured discrete walk in appropriate limits.
url https://quantum-journal.org/q-2017-07-21-19/pdf/
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