Theory of classical metastability in open quantum systems
Katarzyna Macieszczak, Dominic C. Rose, Igor Lesanovsky, Juan P., Garrahan

TL;DR
This paper develops a comprehensive theory explaining how classical metastability arises in open quantum systems due to timescale separation, leading to metastable states that behave like classical probabilistic mixtures and dynamics.
Contribution
It introduces a general framework for classical metastability in open quantum systems, including a numerical method to identify metastable states and classical dynamics.
Findings
Metastable states are approximately disjoint and act as metastable phases.
Long-time dynamics can be approximated by classical stochastic processes.
Time coarse-grained measurement records reflect classical trajectories.
Abstract
We present a general theory of classical metastability in open quantum systems. Metastability is a consequence of a large separation in timescales in the dynamics, leading to the existence of a regime when states of the system appear stationary, before eventual relaxation toward a true stationary state at much larger times. In this work, we focus on the emergence of classical metastability, i.e., when metastable states of an open quantum system with separation of timescales can be approximated as probabilistic mixtures of a finite number of states. We find that a number of classical features follow from this approximation, for the manifold of metastable states, long-time dynamics between them, and symmetries of the dynamics. Namely, those states are approximately disjoint and thus play the role of metastable phases, the relaxation toward the stationary state is approximated by a…
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