Generalized Zeno effect and entanglement dynamics induced by fermion counting
Elias Starchl, Mark H. Fischer, Lukas M. Sieberer

TL;DR
This paper investigates how fermion counting measurements influence entanglement and correlations in a free fermion lattice, revealing a generalized Zeno effect and a finite critical scale for conformal invariance.
Contribution
It introduces a universal long-wavelength description of fermion counting effects, demonstrating a generalized Zeno effect and the absence of a critical phase with logarithmic entanglement.
Findings
High measurement rates induce rapid fluctuations, not freezing of dynamics.
Universal behavior explained by a nonlinear sigma model.
No critical phase with logarithmic entanglement exists.
Abstract
We study a one-dimensional lattice system of free fermions subjected to a generalized measurement process: the system exchanges particles with its environment, but each fermion leaving or entering the system is counted. In contrast to the freezing of dynamics due to frequent measurements of lattice site occupation numbers, a high rate of fermion counts induces fast fluctuations in the state of the system. Still, through numerical simulations of quantum trajectories and an analytical approach based on replica Keldysh field theory, we find that instantaneous correlations and entanglement properties of free fermions subjected to fermion counting and local occupation measurements are strikingly similar. We explain this similarity through a generalized Zeno effect induced by fermion counting and a universal long-wavelength description in terms of a nonlinear sigma model. The physical…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Mechanics and Applications · Atomic and Subatomic Physics Research · Radioactive Decay and Measurement Techniques
