Concepts of quantum non-Markovianity: A hierarchy
Date
2018
Authors
Li, Li
Hall, Michael J W
Wiseman, H M
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Elsevier
Abstract
Markovian approximation is a widely-employed idea in descriptions of the dynamics of
open quantum systems (OQSs). Although it is usually claimed to be a concept inspired by
classical Markovianity, the term quantum Markovianity is used inconsistently and often
unrigorously in the literature. In this report we compare the descriptions of classical
stochastic processes and quantum stochastic processes (as arising in OQSs), and show
that there are inherent differences that lead to the non-trivial problem of characterizing quantum non-Markovianity. Rather than proposing a single definition of quantum
Markovianity, we study a host of Markov-related concepts in the quantum regime. Some
of these concepts have long been used in quantum theory, such as quantum white noise,
factorization approximation, divisibility, and GKS–Lindblad master equation. Others are first
proposed in this report, including those we call past–future independence, no (quantum)
information backflow, and composability. All of these concepts are defined under a unified
framework, which allows us to rigorously build hierarchy relations among them. With
various examples, we argue that the current most often used definitions of quantum
Markovianity in the literature do not fully capture the memoryless property of OQSs. In
fact, quantum non-Markovianity is highly context-dependent. The results in this report,
summarized as a hierarchy figure, bring clarity to the nature of quantum non-Markovianity.
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Physics Reports: Review Section of Physics Letters
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Journal article
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