Non-Markovian dynamics in open quantum systems
Heinz-Peter Breuer, Elsi-Mari Laine, Jyrki Piilo, Bassano Vacchini

TL;DR
This paper reviews the complex non-Markovian dynamics in open quantum systems, emphasizing mathematical definitions, physical interpretations, and experimental detection, highlighting the importance of memory effects for quantum information and environmental probing.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of the recent theoretical and experimental advances in understanding, quantifying, and controlling non-Markovian quantum dynamics in open systems.
Findings
Memory effects reflect environmental features and can be exploited for quantum probing.
Structured spectral densities and initial correlations are key sources of non-Markovianity.
Recent experiments demonstrate detection and control of non-Markovian quantum behavior.
Abstract
The dynamical behavior of open quantum systems plays a key role in many applications of quantum mechanics, examples ranging from fundamental problems, such as the environment-induced decay of quantum coherence and relaxation in many-body systems, to applications in condensed matter theory, quantum transport, quantum chemistry and quantum information. In close analogy to a classical Markov process, the interaction of an open quantum system with a noisy environment is often modelled by a dynamical semigroup with a generator in Lindblad form, which describes a memoryless dynamics leading to an irreversible loss of characteristic quantum features. However, in many applications open systems exhibit pronounced memory effects and a revival of genuine quantum properties such as quantum coherence and correlations. Here, recent results on the rich non-Markovian quantum dynamics of open systems…
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