Adaptive Rotating-Wave Approximation for Driven Open Quantum Systems

ORAL

Abstract

In this talk, I will present a numerical method to approximate the long-time asymptotic solution ρ(t) to the Lindblad master equation for an open quantum system under the influence of an external drive. The proposed scheme uses perturbation theory to rank individual drive terms according to their dynamical relevance, and adaptively determines an effective Hamiltonian. In the constructed rotating frame, ρ is approximated by a time-independent, nonequilibrium steady-state. This steady-state can be computed with much better numerical efficiency than asymptotic long-time evolution of the system in the lab frame. I will illustrate the use of this method by simulating recent transmission measurements of the heavy-fluxonium device, for which ordinary time-dependent simulations are severely challenging due to the presence of metastable states with lifetimes of the order of milliseconds.

*This research was supported by the Army Research Office through Grant No. W911NF-15-1-0421 and by the NSF Graduate Research Fellowship Program through grant No. DGE-1144082.

Presenters

  • Brian Baker

    • Department of Physics and Astronomy, Northwestern University

Authors

  • Brian Baker

    • Department of Physics and Astronomy, Northwestern University
  • Andy C. Y. Li

    • Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory
  • Nicholas Irons

    • Department of Physics and Astronomy, Northwestern University
  • Nathan D Earnest

    • University of Chicago
    • The James Franck Institute and Department of Physics, University of Chicago
  • Jens Koch

    • Department of Physics and Astronomy, Northwestern University
    • Northwestern University
    • Northwestern Univeristy