English

Complexity and Operator Growth for Quantum Systems in Dynamic Equilibrium

High Energy Physics - Theory 2023-12-27 v1 Quantum Physics

Abstract

Krylov complexity is a measure of operator growth in quantum systems, based on the number of orthogonal basis vectors needed to approximate the time evolution of an operator. In this paper, we study the Krylov complexity of a PT\mathsf{PT}-symmetric system of oscillators, which exhibits two phase transitions that separate a dissipative state, a Rabi-oscillation state, and an ultra-strongly coupled regime. We use a generalization of the su(1,1)su(1,1) algebra associated to the Bateman oscillator to describe the Hamiltonian of the coupled system, and construct a set of coherent states associated with this algebra. We compute the Krylov (spread) complexity using these coherent states, and find that it can distinguish between the PT\mathsf{PT}-symmetric and PT\mathsf{PT} symmetry-broken phases. We also show that the Krylov complexity reveals the ill-defined nature of the vacuum of the Bateman oscillator, which is a special case of our system. Our results demonstrate the utility of Krylov complexity as a tool to probe the properties and transitions of PT\mathsf{PT}-symmetric systems.

Cite

@article{arxiv.2312.15790,
  title  = {Complexity and Operator Growth for Quantum Systems in Dynamic Equilibrium},
  author = {Cameron Beetar and Nitin Gupta and S. Shajidul Haque and Jeff Murugan and Hendrik J R Van Zyl},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2312.15790},
  year   = {2023}
}

Comments

24 + 4 pages and appendices

R2 v1 2026-06-28T14:01:40.291Z