Dissipative Quantum Chaos unveiled by Stochastic Quantum Trajectories
Filippo Ferrari, Luca Gravina, Debbie Eeltink, Pasquale Scarlino, Vincenzo Savona, Fabrizio Minganti

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new framework called spectral statistics of quantum trajectories (SSQT) to define and analyze quantum chaos in open quantum systems, revealing how dissipation influences chaotic behavior and system performance.
Contribution
It proposes the SSQT method for diagnosing quantum chaos in open systems and demonstrates its effectiveness on driven-dissipative bosonic models and superconducting qubits.
Findings
Identification of dissipative quantum chaotic phase in Bose-Hubbard model
Distinction between integrable and chaotic regimes in quantum measurements
Quantum chaos can emerge from quantum and classical fluctuations due to dissipation
Abstract
We define quantum chaos and integrability in open quantum many-body systems as a dynamical property of single stochastic realizations, referred to as quantum trajectories. This definition relies on the predictions of random matrix theory applied to the subset of the Liouvillian spectrum involved in each quantum trajectory. Our approach, which we name spectral statistics of quantum trajectories (SSQT), enables a natural distinction between transient and steady-state quantum chaos as general phenomena in open setups. We test the generality and reliability of the SSQT criterion on several dissipative systems, further showing that an open system with a chaotic structure can evolve towards either a chaotic or integrable steady state. We apply our theoretical framework to two driven-dissipative bosonic systems. First, we study the driven-dissipative Bose-Hubbard model, an example of quantum…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsSpectroscopy and Quantum Chemical Studies · Quantum chaos and dynamical systems · Quantum many-body systems
