Concepts of quantum non-Markovianity: a hierarchy
Li Li, Michael J. W. Hall, Howard M. Wiseman

TL;DR
This paper develops a hierarchical framework to clarify the complex and context-dependent nature of quantum non-Markovianity, contrasting it with classical Markovian processes and analyzing various related concepts.
Contribution
It introduces a unified framework and hierarchy of quantum Markovianity concepts, including new definitions like past-future independence and composability.
Findings
Current definitions do not fully capture memoryless quantum dynamics
Quantum non-Markovianity is highly context-dependent
Hierarchy clarifies relationships among quantum Markovianity concepts
Abstract
Markovian approximation is a widely-employed idea in descriptions of the dynamics of open quantum systems (OQSs). Although it is usually claimed to be a concept inspired by classical Markovianity, the term quantum Markovianity is used inconsistently and often unrigorously in the literature. In this report we compare the descriptions of classical stochastic processes and quantum stochastic processes (as arising in OQSs), and show that there are inherent differences that lead to the non-trivial problem of characterizing quantum non-Markovianity. Rather than proposing a single definition of quantum Markovianity, we study a host of Markov-related concepts in the quantum regime. Some of these concepts have long been used in quantum theory, such as quantum white noise, factorization approximation, divisibility, Lindblad master equation, etc.. Others are first proposed in this report,…
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