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Influence of intermediated measurements on quantum statistical complexity of single driven qubit
Author(s) -
Lei Gong,
Hui Yang,
Shengmei Zhao
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
wuli xuebao
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.199
H-Index - 47
ISSN - 1000-3290
DOI - 10.7498/aps.69.20200802
Subject(s) - dephasing , quantum , qubit , quantum information , physics , quantum algorithm , mathematics , discrete mathematics , quantum mechanics , statistical physics , computer science
Recently, quantum statistical complexity based quantum information theory has received much attraction. Quantum measurements can extract the information from a system and may change its state. At the same time, the method of measuring multiple quantum is an important quantum control technique in quantum information science and condensed matter physics. The main goal of this work is to investigate the influence of multiple quantum measurements on quantum statistical complexity.It is a fundamental problem to understand, characterize, and measure the complexity of a system. To address the issue, a damped and linearly driven two-level system (qubit) is taken for example. The driving amplitude and dephasing intensity are considered. By using the Lindblad equation and the Born-Markov approximation, the time evolution of the system can be obtained. Under multiple intermediated measurements, the system has a complex dynamic behavior. Quantum statistical complexity \begin{document}$C$\end{document}at the last moment \begin{document}$\tau$\end{document}is studied in detail. The results show that on the whole, \begin{document}$C$\end{document}first increases from zero to a maximal value with \begin{document}$\tau$\end{document}increasing, then decreases, and finally it approaches to zero. At first, the system is in a pure state and \begin{document}$C=0$\end{document}. Finally, the system is in a maximally mixed state due to the interaction with the environment and \begin{document}$C=0$\end{document}again. When the number of measurements \begin{document}$N$\end{document}is relatively small, \begin{document}$C$\end{document}fluctuates with \begin{document}$\tau$\end{document}increasing, but when \begin{document}$N$\end{document}is relatively large, the fluctuations disappear. Due to the quantum Zeno effect, as \begin{document}$N$\end{document}is larger, the variation of \begin{document}$C$\end{document}with \begin{document}$\tau$\end{document}is similar to that for the case of no intermediated measurement. Because of the quantum superposition principle, uncertainty principle, and quantum collapse, quantum measurement can disturb the system, so quantum statistical complexity \begin{document}$C$\end{document}exhibits a complex behavior.In the quantum realm, the complexity of a system can be transformed into a resource. The quantum state needs creating, operating, or measuring. Therefore, all our results provide a theoretical reference for the optimal controlling of quantum information process and condensed matter physics. At the same time, the number of the degrees of freedom is two for the damped and linearly driven two-level system, so this system is simple and easy to study. The complexity of such a system can be tailored by properly tuning the driving strength. Therefore, the model can be used as a typical example to study the quantum statistical complexity.

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