
TL;DR
This paper investigates the persistence of the Hartman effect in non-Hermitian quantum systems, showing it can occur under broad conditions involving non-reciprocal couplings and the non-Hermitian skin effect.
Contribution
It derives a general condition for the Hartman effect to persist in non-Hermitian barriers, expanding understanding of tunneling times in complex quantum systems.
Findings
Hartman effect can persist in non-Hermitian barriers with non-reciprocal couplings.
Persistence of the effect is linked to the non-Hermitian skin effect.
The condition applies broadly without requiring special symmetries.
Abstract
The Hartman effect refers to the rather paradoxical result that the time spent by a quantum mechanical particle or a photon to tunnel through an opaque potential barrier becomes independent of barrier width for long barriers. Such an effect, which has been observed in different physical settings, raised a lively debate and some controversies, owing to the correct definition and interpretation of tunneling times and the apparent superluminal transmission. A rather open question is whether (and under which conditions) the Hartman effect persists for inelastic scattering, i.e. when the potential becomes non-Hermitian and the scattering matrix is not unitary. Here we consider tunneling through a heterojunction barrier in the tight-binding picture, where the barrier consists of a generally non-Hermitian finite-sized lattice attached to two semi-infinite nearest-neighbor Hermitian lattice…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Mechanics and Non-Hermitian Physics · Quantum, superfluid, helium dynamics · Quantum chaos and dynamical systems
