Hierarchical Equations Of Motion
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The hierarchical equations of motion (HEOM) technique derived by
Yoshitaka Tanimura is a Japanese mathematical physicist, best known for his invention with Ryogo Kubo of the Hierarchical equations of motion. In 1993, while working at University of Rochester with Shaul Mukamel, he published a theoretical paper laying the found ...
and
Ryogo Kubo was a Japanese mathematical physicist, best known for his works in statistical physics and non-equilibrium statistical mechanics. Work In the early 1950s, Kubo transformed research into the linear response properties of near-equilibrium conden ...
in 1989, is a non-perturbative approach developed to study the evolution of a density matrix \rho(t) of quantum dissipative systems. The method can treat system-bath interaction non-perturbatively as well as non-Markovian noise correlation times without the hindrance of the typical assumptions that conventional Redfield (master) equations suffer from such as the Born, Markovian and rotating-wave approximations. HEOM is applicable even at low temperatures where quantum effects are not negligible. The hierarchical equation of motion for a system in a harmonic Markovian bath is : \frac_n = - (\frac\hat^_A + n\gamma) \hat_n - \hat^\hat_ + \hat\hat_


Hierarchical equations of motion

HEOMs are developed to describe the time evolution of the density matrix \rho(t) for an open quantum system. It is a non-perturbative, non-Markovian approach to propagating in time a quantum state. Motivated by the path integral formalism presented by Feynman and Vernon, Tanimura derive the HEOM from a combination of statistical and quantum dynamical techniques. Using a two level spin-boson system Hamiltonian : \hat = \hat_A(\hat^,\hat^) + V(\hat^,\hat^)\sum_c_j\hat_j + \sum_\big + \frac\hat_^ \big Characterising the bath phonons by the spectral density J(\omega) = \sum\nolimits_j c_j^\delta(\omega - \omega_j) By writing the density matrix in path integral notation and making use of Feynman–Vernon influence functional, all the bath coordinates in the interaction terms can be grouped into this influence functional which in some specific cases can be calculated in closed form. Assuming a high temperature heat bath with the Drude spectral distribution J(\omega) = \hbar\eta\gamma^2\omega/\pi(\gamma^2 + \omega^2) and taking the time derivative of the path integral form density matrix the equation and writing it in hierarchal form yields : \frac_n = - (\frac\hat^_A + n\gamma) \hat_n - \hat^\hat_ + \hat\hat_ where \Theta destroys system excitation and hence can be referred to as the relaxation operator. : \hat = -\frac \big( \hat^ - i \frac \hat^\big) The second term in \hat is the temperature correction term with the inverse temperature \beta = 1/k_B T and the "Hyper-operator" notation is introduced. : \hat^ \hat = \hat\hat - \hat \hat : \hat^ \hat = \hat\hat + \hat \hat As with the Kubo's stochastic Liouville equation in hierarchal form, the counter n can go up to infinity which is a problem numerically, however Tanimura and Kubo provide a method by which the infinite hierarchy can be truncated to a finite set of N differential equations where N is determined by some constraint sensitive to the characteristics of the system i.e. frequency, amplitude of fluctuations, bath coupling etc. The "Terminator" defines the depth of the hierarchy. A simple relation to eliminate the \hat_ term is found. \ \hat_ = - \hat \hat_N/ \hbar\gamma. With this terminator the hierarchy is closed at the depth N of the hierarchy by the final term: : \frac_N = -(\frac\hat^_A + N\gamma) \hat_N - \hat^\hat\hat_ + \hat\hat_. The statistical nature of the HEOM approach allows information about the bath noise and system response to be encoded into the equation of motion doctoring the infinite energy problem of Kubo's SLE by introducing the relaxation operator ensuring a return to equilibrium.


Computational cost

When the
open quantum system In physics, an open quantum system is a quantum-mechanical system that interacts with an external quantum system, which is known as the ''environment'' or a ''bath''. In general, these interactions significantly change the dynamics of the system an ...
is represented by M levels and M baths with each bath response function represented by K exponentials, a hierarchy with \mathcal layers will contain: : \frac matrices, each with M^2 complex-valued (containing both real and imaginary parts) elements. Therefore, the limiting factor in HEOM calculations is the amount of RAM required, since if one copy of each matrix is stored, the total RAM required would be: : 16M^2\frac bytes (assuming double-precision).


Implementations

The HEOM method is implemented in a number of freely available codes. A number of these are at the website of
Yoshitaka Tanimura is a Japanese mathematical physicist, best known for his invention with Ryogo Kubo of the Hierarchical equations of motion. In 1993, while working at University of Rochester with Shaul Mukamel, he published a theoretical paper laying the found ...
including a version for GPUs which used improvements introduced by David Wilkins and Nike Dattani. The nanoHUB version provides a very flexible implementation. An open source parallel CPU implementation is available from the
Schulten Schulten is a surname. It may refer to: *Adolf Schulten (1870–1960), German historian and archaeologist * Alcuin Schulten (born 1972), Dutch figure skater *John William Schulten (1821–1875), also spelled Johann Wilhelm, 19th-century chess maste ...
group.url=https://www.ks.uiuc.edu/Research/phi/


See also

*
Quantum master equation A quantum master equation is a generalization of the idea of a master equation. Rather than just a system of differential equations for a set of probabilities (which only constitutes the diagonal elements of a density matrix), quantum master equat ...
*
Open quantum system In physics, an open quantum system is a quantum-mechanical system that interacts with an external quantum system, which is known as the ''environment'' or a ''bath''. In general, these interactions significantly change the dynamics of the system an ...
*
Fokker–Planck equation In statistical mechanics, the Fokker–Planck equation is a partial differential equation that describes the time evolution of the probability density function of the velocity of a particle under the influence of drag forces and random forces, as ...
*
Quantum dynamical semigroup In quantum mechanics, a quantum Markov semigroup describes the dynamics in a Markovian open quantum system. The axiomatic definition of the prototype of quantum Markov semigroups was first introduced by A. M. Kossakowski in 1972, and then develo ...
* Quantum dissipation


References

{{Reflist Quantum mechanics