The arrow of time in open quantum systems and dynamical breaking of the resonance-antiresonance symmetry
read the original abstract
Open quantum systems are often represented by non-Hermitian effective Hamiltonians that have complex eigenvalues associated with resonances. In previous work we showed that the evolution of tight-binding open systems can be represented by an explicitly time-reversal symmetric expansion involving all the discrete eigenstates of the effective Hamiltonian. These eigenstates include complex-conjugate pairs of resonant and anti-resonant states. An initially time-reversal-symmetric state contains equal contributions from the resonant and anti-resonant states. Here we show that as the state evolves in time, the symmetry between the resonant and anti-resonant states is automatically broken, with resonant states becoming dominant for $t>0$ and anti-resonant states becoming dominant for $t<0$. Further, we show that there is a time-scale for this symmetry-breaking, which we associate with the "Zeno time." We also compare the time-reversal symmetric expansion with an asymmetric expansion used previously by several researchers. We show how the present time-reversal symmetric expansion bypasses the non-Hilbert nature of the resonant and anti-resonant states, which previously introduced exponential divergences into the asymmetric expansion.
This paper has not been read by Pith yet.
Forward citations
Cited by 2 Pith papers
-
Exact WKB analysis of inverted triple-well: resonance, PT-symmetry breaking, and resurgence
Exact WKB analysis of inverted triple-well potential reveals PT-symmetry breaking at an exceptional point given by a simple relation between bounce and bion actions, with median-summed spectra real or complex accordingly.
-
Exact WKB analysis of inverted triple-well: resonance, PT-symmetry breaking, and resurgence
Exact WKB analysis produces median-summed spectra and an algebraic equation for the exceptional point of PT-symmetry breaking in the inverted triple-well system.
discussion (0)
Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.