Abstract
Inspired by holographic Wilsonian renormalization, we consider coarse graining a quantum system divided between short-distance and long-distance degrees of freedom (d.o.f.), coupled via the Hamiltonian. Observations using purely long-distance observables are described by the reduced density matrix that arises from tracing out the short-distance d.o.f. The dynamics of this density matrix is non-Hamiltonian and nonlocal in time, on the order of some short time scale. We describe this dynamics in a model system with a simple hierarchy of energy gaps ΔEUV>ΔEIR, in which the coupling between high- and low-energy d.o.f. is treated to second order in perturbation theory. We then describe the equations of motion under suitable time averaging, reflecting the limited time resolution of actual experiments, and find an expansion of the master equation in powers of ΔEIR/ΔEUV, after the fashion of effective field theory. The failure of the system to be Hamiltonian or even Markovian appears at higher orders in this ratio. We compute the evolution of the density matrix in three specific examples: coupled spins, linearly coupled simple harmonic oscillators, and an interacting scalar quantum field theory. Finally, we argue that the logarithm of the Feynman-Vernon influence functional is the correct analog of the Wilsonian effective action for this problem.
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CITATION STYLE
Agon, C., Balasubramanian, V., Kasko, S., & Lawrence, A. (2018). Coarse grained quantum dynamics. Physical Review D, 98(2). https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.98.025019
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