Quantum Brownian motion in a Landau level
Emilio Cobanera, Peter Kristel, Cristiane Morais Smith

TL;DR
This paper explores the unique quantum Brownian motion of electrons in a strong magnetic field where spatial coordinates become noncommutative, revealing unconventional diffusion behavior and potential applications in quantum information storage.
Contribution
It models topological quantum Brownian motion using an unconventional operator Langevin equation and characterizes diffusion in the noncommutative plane, highlighting novel effects of magnetic fields and friction.
Findings
Diffusion remains conventional with mean displacement squared proportional to time.
A regime exists where friction enhances diffusion and magnetic field suppresses fluctuations.
Quantum tunneling can be suppressed in noncommutative planes, aiding quantum information protection.
Abstract
Motivated by questions about the open-system dynamics of topological quantum matter, we investigated the quantum Brownian motion of an electron in a homogeneous magnetic field. When the Fermi length becomes much longer than the magnetic length , then the spatial coordinates of the electron cease to commute, . As a consequence, localization of the electron becomes limited by Heisenberg uncertainty, and the linear bath-electron coupling becomes unconventional. Moreover, because the kinetic energy of the electron is quenched by the strong magnetic field, the electron has no energy to give to or take from the bath, and so the usual connection between frictional forces and dissipation no longer holds. These two features make quantum Brownian motion topological, in the regime , which is at the verge of…
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