Quantum states talk via the environment
Hichem Eleuch, Ingrid Rotter

TL;DR
This paper explores how open quantum system states interact via the environment, revealing nonlinear effects near exceptional points, phase rigidity behavior, and connections to resonance trapping and PT-symmetry breaking.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the nonlinear source term effects on eigenfunctions and eigenvalues, and links these phenomena to experimental results and broader physical systems.
Findings
Phase rigidity approaches one at maximum width bifurcation
Eigenfunctions remain mixed under critical conditions
Resonance trapping is interpreted as a dynamical phase transition
Abstract
The states of an open quantum system interact ("talk") with one another via the extended environment into which the localized system is embedded. This interaction is mediated by the source term of the Schr\"odinger equation which describes the coupling between system and environment. The source term is nonlinear and causes width bifurcation and, respectively, level repulsion. It is strong only in the neighborhood of singular (exceptional) points. We provide typical results for the phase rigidity and the mixing of the biorthogonal eigenfunctions of the Hamiltonian. A completely unexpected result is that the phase rigidity approaches a value near to one (characteristic of orthogonal eigenfunctions) when width bifurcation (or level repulsion) becomes maximum. This behavior of the phase rigidity is caused exclusively by the nonlinearity of the source term of the Schr\"odinger equation. The…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Mechanics and Non-Hermitian Physics · Quantum chaos and dynamical systems · Mechanical and Optical Resonators
