Emergence of singularities from decoherence: Quantum catastrophes
Aaron Z. Goldberg, Asma Al-Qasimi, J. Mumford, D. H. J. O'Dell

TL;DR
This paper investigates how decoherence and measurement backaction influence the formation of singularities in the quantum dynamics of coupled macroscopic systems, revealing a quantum-to-classical transition and the role of caustics.
Contribution
It introduces a novel analysis of caustics in quantum systems under measurement, showing how decoherence modifies classical singularities and the Arnol'd index.
Findings
Decoherence leads to a quantum-to-classical transition.
Measurement backaction softens singularities in the dynamics.
The Arnol'd index is modified by the open quantum system, affecting singularity scaling.
Abstract
We use a master equation to study the dynamics of two coupled macroscopic quantum systems (e.g.\ a Josephson junction made of two Bose-Einstein condensates or two spin states of an ensemble of trapped ions) subject to a weak continuous measurement. If the coupling between the two systems is suddenly switched on the resulting dynamics leads to caustics (fold and cusp catastrophes) in the number-difference probability distribution, and at the same time the measurement gradually induces a quantum-to-classical transition. Decoherence is often invoked to help resolve paradoxes associated with macroscopic quantum mechanics, but here, on the contrary, caustics are well-behaved in the quantum (many-particle) theory and divergent in the classical (mean-field) theory. Caustics thus represent a breakdown of the classical theory towards which decoherence seems to inevitably lead. We find that…
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