Model-Independent Simulation Complexity of Complex Quantum Dynamics

ORAL

Abstract

We present a model-independent measure of dynamical complexity based on simulation of complex quantum dynamics using stroboscopic Markovian dynamics. Tools from classical signal processing enable us to infer the Hilbert space dimension of the complex quantum system evolving under a time-independent Hamiltonian via pulsed interrogation. We illustrate this using simulated third-order pump-probe spectroscopy data for exciton transport in a toy model of a coupled dimer with vibrational levels, revealing the dimension of the singly-excited manifold of the dimer. Finally, we probe the complexity of excitonic transport in light harvesting 2 (LH2) and Fenna-Matthews-Olson (FMO) complexes using data from two recent nonlinear ultrafast optical spectroscopy experiments. For the latter we make model-independent inferences that are commensurate with model-specific ones, including the estimation of the fewest number of parameters needed to fit the experimental data and identifying the spatial extent, i.e., delocalization size, of quantum states participating in this complex quantum dynamics.

*AK was supported by a Chancellor's scholarship from the University of Warwick and AD by an EPSRC fellowship (EP/K04057X/2).

Presenters

  • Aiman Khan

    • Univ of Warwick

Authors

  • Aiman Khan

    • Univ of Warwick
  • David Quigley

    • Univ of Warwick
  • Max Marcus

    • Physical and Theoretical Chemistry Laboratory, Department of Chemistry, University of Oxford
  • Erling Thyrhaug

    • Dynamical Spectroscopy, Department of Chemistry, Technical University of Munich
  • Animesh Datta

    • Univ of Warwick
    • University of Warwick
    • Department of Physics, University of Warwick