Quantum trajectories and open many-body quantum systems
Andrew J. Daley

TL;DR
This paper reviews the development and application of quantum trajectories in studying open many-body quantum systems within atomic, molecular, and optical physics, highlighting their role in understanding and controlling dissipative processes.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of how quantum trajectories are used to analyze open many-body systems and discusses new control methods for dissipative quantum state engineering.
Findings
Quantum trajectories effectively model open many-body dynamics.
Control of dissipation enables novel quantum state preparation.
Applications in quantum simulation are expanding.
Abstract
The study of open quantum systems has become increasingly important in the past years, as the ability to control quantum coherence on a single particle level has been developed in a wide variety of physical systems. In quantum optics, the study of open systems goes well beyond understanding the breakdown of quantum coherence. There, the coupling to the environment is sufficiently well understood that it can be manipulated to drive the system into desired quantum states, or to project the system onto known states via feedback in quantum measurements. Many mathematical frameworks have been developed to describe such systems, which for atomic, molecular, and optical (AMO) systems generally provide a very accurate description of the open quantum system on a microscopic level. In recent years, AMO systems including cold atomic and molecular gases and trapped ions have been applied heavily to…
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