Decoherence in quantum cavities: Environmental erasure of carpet-type structures
E. Honrubia, A. S. Sanz

TL;DR
This paper investigates how decoherence affects carpet-type quantum structures in cavities, showing that decoherence causes energy density matrix collapse but does not necessarily localize the particle spatially, highlighting the complex nature of quantum-to-classical transition.
Contribution
It introduces a simple dynamical model to study decoherence effects on carpet structures, emphasizing the role of energy dissipation and off-diagonal correlations in quantum decoherence.
Findings
Decoherence causes energy density matrix to collapse to its main diagonal.
Spatial probability distribution remains delocalized without dissipation.
Classicality requires both decoherence and dissipation to coexist.
Abstract
Carpet-type structures constitute an ideal laboratory to study and analyze the robustness of the interference process that underlies this phenomenon against the harmful effects of decoherence. Here, without losing any generality, for simplicity, the case of a particle with a mass m is considered and described by a localized state corresponding to the ground state of a square box of width w, which is released inside a wider cavity (with a width L > w). The effects of decoherence are then numerically investigated by means of a simple dynamical model that captures the essential features of the phenomenon under Markovian conditions, leaving aside extra complications associated with a more detailed dynamical description of the system-environment interaction. As it is shown, this model takes into account and reproduces the fact that decoherence effects are stronger as energy levels become…
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