TransWikia.com

Is the establishment of entanglement inevitable with the passage of time?

Physics Asked on April 11, 2021

Derivation of the Lindblad master equation starts with the assumption that at an initial time $t=0$, the total density matrix is the product of the density matrices of the system $rho_S$ and that of the environment $rho_E$ i.e. $$rho_{rm tot}(0)=rho_S(0)otimesrho_E(0)tag{1}$$

Question If we start with such a factorizable density matrix (of the form Eq.$(1)$), is it inevitable that entanglement will be established between system and environment at $t>0$ irrespective of the interaction Hamiltonian that couples the system and environment? Can we think of a situation where the interaction Hamiltonian such that no entanglement is ever produced under time development?

One Answer

Yes, it is inevitable that entanglement will emerge at $t>0$ if you want your system to evolve in a non-trivial way. This is due to the fact that, if the action of the bath on the system is not trivial, it means that the system-environment interaction is non-local and generates entanglement. Although for Markovian systems the amount of correlations built up at each time-step are neglected during the computation of the master equation, they still exist, e.g. have a look at the nice discussion in this reference: if the bath is large but finite, the emergence of correlations is clearly visible.

Still, it may happen that the system-environment interaction has no effect on a certain subspace of the Hilbert space of the system. This is the case of the decoherence-free subspaces. If the initial state of the system belongs to a decoherence-free subspace, then its dynamics will be decoupled from the environment one and no entanglement will arise.

Answered by Goffredo_Gretzky on April 11, 2021

Add your own answers!

Ask a Question

Get help from others!

© 2024 TransWikia.com. All rights reserved. Sites we Love: PCI Database, UKBizDB, Menu Kuliner, Sharing RPP