Optimal Time Evolution for Hermitian and Non-Hermitian Hamiltonians
Carl M. Bender, Dorje C. Brody

TL;DR
This paper investigates the minimum evolution time between quantum states under fixed energy constraints, revealing that non-Hermitian PT-symmetric Hamiltonians can achieve arbitrarily fast state transformations, unlike Hermitian ones.
Contribution
It demonstrates that PT-symmetric Hamiltonians can minimize evolution time beyond Hermitian limits by exploiting their unique metric properties.
Findings
Hermitian Hamiltonians have a nonzero lower bound on evolution time.
PT-symmetric Hamiltonians can make evolution time arbitrarily small.
The shortest evolution path can be made arbitrarily short in PT-symmetric quantum theory.
Abstract
Consider the set of all Hamiltonians whose largest and smallest energy eigenvalues, E_max and E_min, differ by a fixed energy \omega. Given two quantum states, an initial state |\psi_I> and a final state |\psi_F>, there exist many Hamiltonians H belonging to this set under which |\psi_I> evolves in time into |\psi_F>. Which Hamiltonian transforms the initial state to the final state in the least possible time \tau? For Hermitian Hamiltonians, has a nonzero lower bound. However, among complex non-Hermitian PT-symmetric Hamiltonians satisfying the same energy constraint, \tau can be made arbitrarily small without violating the time-energy uncertainty principle. The minimum value of \tau can be made arbitrarily small because for PT-symmetric Hamiltonians the evolution path from the vector |\psi_I> to the vector |\psi_F>, as measured using the Hilbert-space metric appropriate for…
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