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Quantum stochastic calculus

Quantum stochastic calculus is a generalization of stochastic calculus to noncommuting variables.[1] The tools provided by quantum stochastic calculus are of great use for modeling the random evolution of systems undergoing measurement, as in quantum trajectories.[2]: 148  Just as the Lindblad master equation provides a quantum generalization to the Fokker–Planck equation, quantum stochastic calculus allows for the derivation of quantum stochastic differential equations (QSDE) that are analogous to classical Langevin equations.

For the remainder of this article stochastic calculus will be referred to as classical stochastic calculus, in order to clearly distinguish it from quantum stochastic calculus.

Heat baths edit

An important physical scenario in which a quantum stochastic calculus is needed is the case of a system interacting with a heat bath. It is appropriate in many circumstances to model the heat bath as an assembly of harmonic oscillators. One type of interaction between the system and the bath can be modeled (after making a canonical transformation) by the following Hamiltonian:[3]: 42, 45 

 

where   is the system Hamiltonian,   is a vector containing the system variables corresponding to a finite number of degrees of freedom,   is an index for the different bath modes,   is the frequency of a particular mode,   and   are bath operators for a particular mode,   is a system operator, and   quantifies the coupling between the system and a particular bath mode.

In this scenario the equation of motion for an arbitrary system operator   is called the quantum Langevin equation and may be written as:[3]: 46–47 

 

where   and   denote the commutator and anticommutator (respectively), the memory function   is defined as:

 

and the time dependent noise operator   is defined as:

 

where the bath annihilation operator   is defined as:

 

Oftentimes this equation is more general than is needed, and further approximations are made to simplify the equation.

White noise formalism edit

For many purposes it is convenient to make approximations about the nature of the heat bath in order to achieve a white noise formalism. In such a case the interaction may be modeled by the Hamiltonian   where:[4]: 3762 

 

and

 

where   are annihilation operators for the bath with the commutation relation  ,   is an operator on the system,   quantifies the strength of the coupling of the bath modes to the system, and   describes the free system evolution.[3]: 148  This model uses the rotating wave approximation and extends the lower limit of   to   in order to admit a mathematically simple white noise formalism. The coupling strengths are also usually simplified to a constant in what is sometimes called the first Markov approximation:[4]: 3763 

 

Systems coupled to a bath of harmonic oscillators can be thought of as being driven by a noise input and radiating a noise output.[3]: 43  The input noise operator at time   is defined by:[3]: 150 [4]: 3763 

 

where  , since this operator is expressed in the Heisenberg picture. Satisfaction of the commutation relation   allows the model to have a strict correspondence with a Markovian master equation.[2]: 142 

In the white noise setting described so far, the quantum Langevin equation for an arbitrary system operator   takes a simpler form:[4]: 3763 

    (WN1)

For the case most closely corresponding to classical white noise, the input to the system is described by a density operator giving the following expectation value:[3]: 154 

 

 

 

 

 

(WN2)

Quantum Wiener process edit

In order to define quantum stochastic integration, it is important to define a quantum Wiener process:[3]: 155 [4]: 3765 

 

This definition gives the quantum Wiener process the commutation relation  . The property of the bath annihilation operators in (WN2) implies that the quantum Wiener process has an expectation value of:

 

The quantum Wiener processes are also specified such that their quasiprobability distributions are Gaussian by defining the density operator:

 

where  .[4]: 3765 

Quantum stochastic integration edit

The stochastic evolution of system operators can also be defined in terms of the stochastic integration of given equations.

Quantum Itô integral edit

The quantum Itô integral of a system operator   is given by:[3]: 155 

 

where the bold (I) preceding the integral stands for Itô. One of the characteristics of defining the integral in this way is that the increments   and   commute with the system operator.

Itô quantum stochastic differential equation edit

In order to define the Itô QSDE, it is necessary to know something about the bath statistics.[3]: 159  In the context of the white noise formalism described earlier, the Itô QSDE can be defined as:[3]: 156 

 

where the equation has been simplified using the Lindblad superoperator:[2]: 105 

 

This differential equation is interpreted as defining the system operator   as the quantum Itô integral of the right hand side, and is equivalent to the Langevin equation (WN1).[4]: 3765 

Quantum Stratonovich integral edit

The quantum Stratonovich integral of a system operator   is given by:[3]: 157 

 

where the bold (S) preceding the integral stands for Stratonovich. Unlike the Itô formulation, the increments in the Stratonovich integral do not commute with the system operator, and it can be shown that:[3]

 

Stratonovich quantum stochastic differential equation edit

The Stratonovich QSDE can be defined as:[3]: 158 

 

This differential equation is interpreted as defining the system operator   as the quantum Stratonovich integral of the right hand side, and is in the same form as the Langevin equation (WN1).[4]: 3766–3767 

Relation between Itô and Stratonovich integrals edit

The two definitions of quantum stochastic integrals relate to one another in the following way, assuming a bath with   defined as before:[3]

 

Calculus rules edit

Just as with classical stochastic calculus, the appropriate product rule can be derived for Itô and Stratonovich integration, respectively:[3]: 156, 159 

 
 

As is the case in classical stochastic calculus, the Stratonovich form is the one which preserves the ordinary calculus (which in this case is noncommuting). A peculiarity in the quantum generalization is the necessity to define both Itô and Stratonovitch integration in order to prove that the Stratonovitch form preserves the rules of noncommuting calculus.[3]: 155 

Quantum trajectories edit

Quantum trajectories can generally be thought of as the path through Hilbert space that the state of a quantum system traverses over time. In a stochastic setting, these trajectories are often conditioned upon measurement results. The unconditioned Markovian evolution of a quantum system (averaged over all possible measurement outcomes) is given by a Lindblad equation. In order to describe the conditioned evolution in these cases, it is necessary to unravel the Lindblad equation by choosing a consistent QSDE. In the case where the conditioned system state is always pure, the unraveling could be in the form of a stochastic Schrödinger equation (SSE). If the state may become mixed, then it is necessary to use a stochastic master equation (SME).[2]: 148 

Example unravelings edit

 
Plot of the evolution of the z-component of the Bloch vector of a two-level atom coupled to the electromagnetic field undergoing damped Rabi oscillations. The top plot shows the quantum trajectory for the atom for photon-counting measurements performed on the electromagnetic field, the middle plot shows the same for homodyne detection, and the bottom plot compares the previous two measurement choices (each averaged over 32 trajectories) with the unconditioned evolution given by the master equation.

Consider the following Lindblad master equation for a system interacting with a vacuum bath:[2]: 145 

 

This describes the evolution of the system state averaged over the outcomes of any particular measurement that might be made on the bath. The following SME describes the evolution of the system conditioned on the results of a continuous photon-counting measurement performed on the bath:

 

where

 

are nonlinear superoperators and   is the photocount, indicating how many photons have been detected at time   and giving the following jump probability:[2]: 152, 155 

 

where   denotes the expected value. Another type of measurement that could be made on the bath is homodyne detection, which results in quantum trajectories given by the following SME:

 

where   is a Wiener increment satisfying:[2]: 161 

 

Although these two SMEs look wildly different, calculating their expected evolution shows that they are both indeed unravelings of the same Lindlad master equation:

 

Computational considerations edit

One important application of quantum trajectories is reducing the computational resources required to simulate a master equation. For a Hilbert space of dimension d, the amount of real numbers required to store the density matrix is of order d2, and the time required to compute the master equation evolution is of order d4. Storing the state vector for a SSE, on the other hand, only requires an amount of real numbers of order d, and the time to compute trajectory evolution is only of order d2. The master equation evolution can then be approximated by averaging over many individual trajectories simulated using the SSE, a technique sometimes referred to as the Monte Carlo wave-function approach.[5] Although the number of calculated trajectories n must be very large in order to accurately approximate the master equation, good results can be obtained for trajectory counts much less than d2. Not only does this technique yield faster computation time, but it also allows for the simulation of master equations on machines that do not have enough memory to store the entire density matrix.[2]: 153 

References edit

  1. ^ Hudson, R. L.; Parthasarathy, K. R. (1984-09-01). "Quantum Ito's Formula and Stochastic Evolutions". Communications in Mathematical Physics. 93 (3): 301–323. Bibcode:1984CMaPh..93..301H. doi:10.1007/BF01258530. S2CID 122848524.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h Wiseman, Howard M.; Milburn, Gerard J. (2010). Quantum Measurement and Control. New York: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-80442-4.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Gardiner, C. W.; Zoller, P. (2010). Quantum Noise. Springer Series in Synergetics (3rd ed.). Berlin Heidelberg: Springer-Verlag. ISBN 978-3-642-06094-6.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h Gardiner, C. W.; Collett, M. J. (June 1985). "Input and output in damped quantum systems: Quantum stochastic differential equations and the master equation". Physical Review A. 31 (6): 3761–3774. Bibcode:1985PhRvA..31.3761G. doi:10.1103/PhysRevA.31.3761. PMID 9895956.
  5. ^ Dalibard, Jean; Castin, Yvan; Mølmer, Klaus (Feb 1992). "Wave-function approach to dissipative processes in quantum optics". Phys. Rev. Lett. American Physical Society. 68 (5): 580–583. arXiv:0805.4002. Bibcode:1992PhRvL..68..580D. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.68.580. PMID 10045937.

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Quantum stochastic calculus is a generalization of stochastic calculus to noncommuting variables 1 The tools provided by quantum stochastic calculus are of great use for modeling the random evolution of systems undergoing measurement as in quantum trajectories 2 148 Just as the Lindblad master equation provides a quantum generalization to the Fokker Planck equation quantum stochastic calculus allows for the derivation of quantum stochastic differential equations QSDE that are analogous to classical Langevin equations For the remainder of this article stochastic calculus will be referred to as classical stochastic calculus in order to clearly distinguish it from quantum stochastic calculus Contents 1 Heat baths 1 1 White noise formalism 1 2 Quantum Wiener process 2 Quantum stochastic integration 2 1 Quantum Ito integral 2 2 Ito quantum stochastic differential equation 2 3 Quantum Stratonovich integral 2 4 Stratonovich quantum stochastic differential equation 2 5 Relation between Ito and Stratonovich integrals 2 6 Calculus rules 3 Quantum trajectories 3 1 Example unravelings 3 2 Computational considerations 4 ReferencesHeat baths editAn important physical scenario in which a quantum stochastic calculus is needed is the case of a system interacting with a heat bath It is appropriate in many circumstances to model the heat bath as an assembly of harmonic oscillators One type of interaction between the system and the bath can be modeled after making a canonical transformation by the following Hamiltonian 3 42 45 H H s y s Z 1 2 n p n k n X 2 w n 2 q n 2 displaystyle H H mathrm sys mathbf Z frac 1 2 sum n left p n kappa n X 2 omega n 2 q n 2 right nbsp where H s y s displaystyle H mathrm sys nbsp is the system Hamiltonian Z displaystyle mathbf Z nbsp is a vector containing the system variables corresponding to a finite number of degrees of freedom n displaystyle n nbsp is an index for the different bath modes w n displaystyle omega n nbsp is the frequency of a particular mode p n displaystyle p n nbsp and q n displaystyle q n nbsp are bath operators for a particular mode X displaystyle X nbsp is a system operator and k n displaystyle kappa n nbsp quantifies the coupling between the system and a particular bath mode In this scenario the equation of motion for an arbitrary system operator Y displaystyle Y nbsp is called the quantum Langevin equation and may be written as 3 46 47 Y t i ℏ H s y s Y t i 2 ℏ X Y t 3 t t 0 t f t t 0 X t d t f t t 0 X t 0 displaystyle dot Y t frac i hbar H mathrm sys Y t frac i 2 hbar left X left Y t xi t int t 0 t f t t 0 dot X t prime mathrm d t prime f t t 0 X t 0 right right nbsp where displaystyle cdot cdot nbsp and displaystyle cdot cdot nbsp denote the commutator and anticommutator respectively the memory function f displaystyle f nbsp is defined as f t n k n 2 cos w n t displaystyle f t equiv sum n kappa n 2 cos omega n t nbsp and the time dependent noise operator 3 displaystyle xi nbsp is defined as 3 t i n k n ℏ w n 2 a n t 0 e i w n t t 0 a n t 0 e i w n t t 0 displaystyle xi t equiv i sum n kappa n sqrt frac hbar omega n 2 left a n t 0 e i omega n t t 0 a n dagger t 0 e i omega n t t 0 right nbsp where the bath annihilation operator a n displaystyle a n nbsp is defined as a n w n q n i p n 2 ℏ w n displaystyle a n equiv frac omega n q n ip n sqrt 2 hbar omega n nbsp Oftentimes this equation is more general than is needed and further approximations are made to simplify the equation White noise formalism edit For many purposes it is convenient to make approximations about the nature of the heat bath in order to achieve a white noise formalism In such a case the interaction may be modeled by the Hamiltonian H H s y s H B H i n t displaystyle H H mathrm sys H B H mathrm int nbsp where 4 3762 H B ℏ d w w b w b w displaystyle H B hbar int infty infty mathrm d omega omega b dagger omega b omega nbsp and H i n t i ℏ d w k w b w c c b w displaystyle H mathrm int i hbar int infty infty mathrm d omega kappa omega left b dagger omega c c dagger b omega right nbsp where b w displaystyle b omega nbsp are annihilation operators for the bath with the commutation relation b w b w d w w displaystyle b omega b dagger omega prime delta omega omega prime nbsp c displaystyle c nbsp is an operator on the system k w displaystyle kappa omega nbsp quantifies the strength of the coupling of the bath modes to the system and H s y s displaystyle H mathrm sys nbsp describes the free system evolution 3 148 This model uses the rotating wave approximation and extends the lower limit of w displaystyle omega nbsp to displaystyle infty nbsp in order to admit a mathematically simple white noise formalism The coupling strengths are also usually simplified to a constant in what is sometimes called the first Markov approximation 4 3763 k w g 2 p displaystyle kappa omega sqrt frac gamma 2 pi nbsp Systems coupled to a bath of harmonic oscillators can be thought of as being driven by a noise input and radiating a noise output 3 43 The input noise operator at time t displaystyle t nbsp is defined by 3 150 4 3763 b i n t 1 2 p d w e i w t t 0 b 0 w displaystyle b mathrm in t frac 1 sqrt 2 pi int infty infty mathrm d omega e i omega t t 0 b 0 omega nbsp where b 0 w b w t t 0 displaystyle b 0 omega left b omega right vert t t 0 nbsp since this operator is expressed in the Heisenberg picture Satisfaction of the commutation relation b i n t b i n t d t t displaystyle b mathrm in t b mathrm in dagger t prime delta t t prime nbsp allows the model to have a strict correspondence with a Markovian master equation 2 142 In the white noise setting described so far the quantum Langevin equation for an arbitrary system operator a displaystyle a nbsp takes a simpler form 4 3763 a i ℏ a H s y s a c g 2 c g b i n t g 2 c g b i n t a c displaystyle dot a frac i hbar a H mathrm sys a c dagger left frac gamma 2 c sqrt gamma b mathrm in t right left frac gamma 2 c dagger sqrt gamma b mathrm in dagger t right a c nbsp WN1 For the case most closely corresponding to classical white noise the input to the system is described by a density operator giving the following expectation value 3 154 b i n t b i n t r i n N d t t displaystyle langle b mathrm in dagger t b mathrm in t prime rangle rho mathrm in N delta t t prime nbsp WN2 Quantum Wiener process edit In order to define quantum stochastic integration it is important to define a quantum Wiener process 3 155 4 3765 B t t 0 t 0 t b i n t d t displaystyle B t t 0 int t 0 t b mathrm in t prime mathrm d t prime nbsp This definition gives the quantum Wiener process the commutation relation B t t 0 B t t 0 t t 0 displaystyle B t t 0 B dagger t t 0 t t 0 nbsp The property of the bath annihilation operators in WN2 implies that the quantum Wiener process has an expectation value of B t t 0 B t t 0 r t t 0 N t t 0 displaystyle langle B dagger t t 0 B t t 0 rangle rho t t 0 N t t 0 nbsp The quantum Wiener processes are also specified such that their quasiprobability distributions are Gaussian by defining the density operator r t t 0 1 e k exp k B t t 0 B t t 0 t t 0 displaystyle rho t t 0 1 e kappa exp left frac kappa B dagger t t 0 B t t 0 t t 0 right nbsp where N 1 e k 1 displaystyle N 1 e kappa 1 nbsp 4 3765 Quantum stochastic integration editThe stochastic evolution of system operators can also be defined in terms of the stochastic integration of given equations Quantum Ito integral edit The quantum Ito integral of a system operator g t displaystyle g t nbsp is given by 3 155 I t 0 t g t d B t lim n i 1 n g t i B t i 1 t 0 B t i t 0 displaystyle mathbf I int t 0 t g t prime mathrm d B t prime lim n to infty sum i 1 n g t i left B t i 1 t 0 B t i t 0 right nbsp where the bold I preceding the integral stands for Ito One of the characteristics of defining the integral in this way is that the increments d B displaystyle mathrm d B nbsp and d B displaystyle mathrm d B dagger nbsp commute with the system operator Ito quantum stochastic differential equation edit In order to define the Ito QSDE it is necessary to know something about the bath statistics 3 159 In the context of the white noise formalism described earlier the Ito QSDE can be defined as 3 156 I d a i ℏ a H s y s d t g N 1 D c a N D c a d t g a c d B t d B t a c displaystyle mathbf I mathrm d a frac i hbar a H mathrm sys mathrm d t gamma left N 1 mathcal D c dagger a N mathcal D c a right mathrm d t sqrt gamma left a c dagger mathrm d B t mathrm d B dagger t a c right nbsp where the equation has been simplified using the Lindblad superoperator 2 105 D A a A a A 1 2 A A a a A A displaystyle mathcal D A a equiv AaA dagger frac 1 2 left A dagger Aa aA dagger A right nbsp This differential equation is interpreted as defining the system operator a displaystyle a nbsp as the quantum Ito integral of the right hand side and is equivalent to the Langevin equation WN1 4 3765 Quantum Stratonovich integral edit The quantum Stratonovich integral of a system operator g t displaystyle g t nbsp is given by 3 157 S t 0 t g t d B t lim n i 1 n g t i g t i 1 2 B t i 1 t 0 B t i t 0 displaystyle mathbf S int t 0 t g t prime mathrm d B t prime lim n to infty sum i 1 n frac g t i g t i 1 2 left B t i 1 t 0 B t i t 0 right nbsp where the bold S preceding the integral stands for Stratonovich Unlike the Ito formulation the increments in the Stratonovich integral do not commute with the system operator and it can be shown that 3 S t 0 t g t d B t S t 0 t d B t g t g 2 t 0 t d t g t c t displaystyle mathbf S int t 0 t g t prime mathrm d B t prime mathbf S int t 0 t mathrm d B t prime g t prime frac sqrt gamma 2 int t 0 t mathrm d t prime g t prime c t prime nbsp Stratonovich quantum stochastic differential equation edit The Stratonovich QSDE can be defined as 3 158 S d a i ℏ a H s y s d t g 2 a c c c a c d t g a c d B t d B t a c displaystyle mathbf S mathrm d a frac i hbar a H mathrm sys mathrm d t frac gamma 2 left a c dagger c c dagger a c right mathrm d t sqrt gamma left a c dagger mathrm d B t mathrm d B dagger t a c right nbsp This differential equation is interpreted as defining the system operator a displaystyle a nbsp as the quantum Stratonovich integral of the right hand side and is in the same form as the Langevin equation WN1 4 3766 3767 Relation between Ito and Stratonovich integrals edit The two definitions of quantum stochastic integrals relate to one another in the following way assuming a bath with N displaystyle N nbsp defined as before 3 S t 0 t g t d B t I t 0 t g t d B t 1 2 g N t 0 t d t g t c t displaystyle mathbf S int t 0 t g t prime mathrm d B t prime mathbf I int t 0 t g t prime mathrm d B t prime frac 1 2 sqrt gamma N int t 0 t mathrm d t prime g t prime c t prime nbsp Calculus rules edit Just as with classical stochastic calculus the appropriate product rule can be derived for Ito and Stratonovich integration respectively 3 156 159 I d a b a d b b d a d a d b displaystyle mathbf I mathrm d ab a mathrm d b b mathrm d a mathrm d a mathrm d b nbsp S d a b a d b d a b displaystyle mathbf S mathrm d ab a mathrm d b mathrm d a b nbsp As is the case in classical stochastic calculus the Stratonovich form is the one which preserves the ordinary calculus which in this case is noncommuting A peculiarity in the quantum generalization is the necessity to define both Ito and Stratonovitch integration in order to prove that the Stratonovitch form preserves the rules of noncommuting calculus 3 155 Quantum trajectories editQuantum trajectories can generally be thought of as the path through Hilbert space that the state of a quantum system traverses over time In a stochastic setting these trajectories are often conditioned upon measurement results The unconditioned Markovian evolution of a quantum system averaged over all possible measurement outcomes is given by a Lindblad equation In order to describe the conditioned evolution in these cases it is necessary to unravel the Lindblad equation by choosing a consistent QSDE In the case where the conditioned system state is always pure the unraveling could be in the form of a stochastic Schrodinger equation SSE If the state may become mixed then it is necessary to use a stochastic master equation SME 2 148 Example unravelings edit nbsp Plot of the evolution of the z component of the Bloch vector of a two level atom coupled to the electromagnetic field undergoing damped Rabi oscillations The top plot shows the quantum trajectory for the atom for photon counting measurements performed on the electromagnetic field the middle plot shows the same for homodyne detection and the bottom plot compares the previous two measurement choices each averaged over 32 trajectories with the unconditioned evolution given by the master equation Consider the following Lindblad master equation for a system interacting with a vacuum bath 2 145 r D c r i H s y s r displaystyle dot rho mathcal D c rho i H mathrm sys rho nbsp This describes the evolution of the system state averaged over the outcomes of any particular measurement that might be made on the bath The following SME describes the evolution of the system conditioned on the results of a continuous photon counting measurement performed on the bath d r I t d N t G c d t H i H s y s 1 2 c c r I t displaystyle mathrm d rho I t left mathrm d N t mathcal G c mathrm d t mathcal H iH mathrm sys frac 1 2 c dagger c right rho I t nbsp where G r r r r r Tr r r r r H r r r r r r Tr r r r r r displaystyle begin array rcl mathcal G r rho amp equiv amp frac r rho r dagger operatorname Tr r rho r dagger rho mathcal H r rho amp equiv amp r rho rho r dagger operatorname Tr r rho rho r dagger rho end array nbsp are nonlinear superoperators and N t displaystyle N t nbsp is the photocount indicating how many photons have been detected at time t displaystyle t nbsp and giving the following jump probability 2 152 155 E d N t d t Tr c c r I t displaystyle operatorname E mathrm d N t mathrm d t operatorname Tr c dagger c rho I t nbsp where E displaystyle operatorname E cdot nbsp denotes the expected value Another type of measurement that could be made on the bath is homodyne detection which results in quantum trajectories given by the following SME d r J t i H s y s r J t d t d t D c r J t d W t H c r J t displaystyle mathrm d rho J t i H mathrm sys rho J t mathrm d t mathrm d t mathcal D c rho J t mathrm d W t mathcal H c rho J t nbsp where d W t displaystyle mathrm d W t nbsp is a Wiener increment satisfying 2 161 d W t 2 d t E d W t 0 displaystyle begin array rcl mathrm d W t 2 amp amp mathrm d t operatorname E mathrm d W t amp amp 0 end array nbsp Although these two SMEs look wildly different calculating their expected evolution shows that they are both indeed unravelings of the same Lindlad master equation E d r I t E d r J t r d t displaystyle operatorname E mathrm d rho I t operatorname E mathrm d rho J t dot rho mathrm d t nbsp Computational considerations edit One important application of quantum trajectories is reducing the computational resources required to simulate a master equation For a Hilbert space of dimension d the amount of real numbers required to store the density matrix is of order d2 and the time required to compute the master equation evolution is of order d4 Storing the state vector for a SSE on the other hand only requires an amount of real numbers of order d and the time to compute trajectory evolution is only of order d2 The master equation evolution can then be approximated by averaging over many individual trajectories simulated using the SSE a technique sometimes referred to as the Monte Carlo wave function approach 5 Although the number of calculated trajectories n must be very large in order to accurately approximate the master equation good results can be obtained for trajectory counts much less than d2 Not only does this technique yield faster computation time but it also allows for the simulation of master equations on machines that do not have enough memory to store the entire density matrix 2 153 References edit Hudson R L Parthasarathy K R 1984 09 01 Quantum Ito s Formula and Stochastic Evolutions Communications in Mathematical Physics 93 3 301 323 Bibcode 1984CMaPh 93 301H doi 10 1007 BF01258530 S2CID 122848524 a b c d e f g h Wiseman Howard M Milburn Gerard J 2010 Quantum Measurement and Control New York Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 80442 4 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Gardiner C W Zoller P 2010 Quantum Noise Springer Series in Synergetics 3rd ed Berlin Heidelberg Springer Verlag ISBN 978 3 642 06094 6 a b c d e f g h Gardiner C W Collett M J June 1985 Input and output in damped quantum systems Quantum stochastic differential equations and the master equation Physical Review A 31 6 3761 3774 Bibcode 1985PhRvA 31 3761G doi 10 1103 PhysRevA 31 3761 PMID 9895956 Dalibard Jean Castin Yvan Molmer Klaus Feb 1992 Wave function approach to dissipative processes in quantum optics Phys Rev Lett American Physical Society 68 5 580 583 arXiv 0805 4002 Bibcode 1992PhRvL 68 580D doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 68 580 PMID 10045937 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Quantum stochastic calculus amp oldid 1113931069, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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