The spectral dimension controls the decay of the quantum first detection probability
Felix Thiel, David A. Kessler, and Eli Barkai

TL;DR
This paper investigates how the spectral properties of a quantum system influence the decay and oscillations of the first detection probability, revealing power-law decay linked to the spectral density and identifying critical detection periods.
Contribution
It establishes a connection between the spectral density of states and the decay behavior of quantum first detection probabilities, including the effects of singularities and initial state dependence.
Findings
First detection probability decays as a power law determined by spectral density exponents.
Oscillations in detection probability are linked to spectral singularities and vanish at critical periods.
Numerical simulations confirm the theoretical asymptotic formulas for various quantum models.
Abstract
We consider a quantum system that is initially localized at and that is repeatedly projectively probed with a fixed period at position . We ask for the probability that the system is detected in for the very first time, , where is the number of detection attempts. We relate the asymptotic decay and oscillations of with the system's energy spectrum, which is assumed to be absolutely continuous. In particular is determined by the Hamiltonian's measurement spectral density of states (MSDOS) that is closely related to the density of energy states (DOS). We find that decays like a power law whose exponent is determined by the power law exponent of around its singularities . Our findings are analogous to the classical first passage theory of random walks. In contrast to the classical case, the decay of is…
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