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To treat a heavy quark as an open quantum system in a medium, we follow Ref. [39] and note the full Schrödinger equation for both the system and the environment (with natural units
$ \hbar=c=1 $ ),$ {\rm i} {{\rm d}\left|\Phi(t) \right\rangle \over {\rm d}t} = (\hat{H}_{S} + \hat{H}_{B} + \lambda \hat{W}(t))\left|\Phi(t) \right\rangle, $
(1) where
$ \hat{H}_S $ and$ \hat{H}_B $ are the Hamiltonian of the system and the thermal bath (environment), respectively.$ \hat{W}(t) $ is the interaction between the system and the environment. λ is the coupling constant.$ \left|\Phi(t) \right\rangle $ is the full wave function of the system and the environment. In the interaction picture, the Schrodinger equation becomes,$ {\rm i} {{\rm d}\left|\Phi_I(t) \right\rangle \over {\rm d}t} = \lambda \hat{W}_I(t)\left|\Phi_I(t) \right\rangle , $
(2) where the full wave function in the interaction picture consists of two parts: the wave functions of the system (
$ \left|\varphi_I \right\rangle $ ) and the environment ($ \left|n \right\rangle $ ),$ \left|\Phi_I(t)\right\rangle=\sum_n\left|\varphi_I^n(t)\right\rangle \otimes \left|n \right\rangle $ . To solve Eq. (2), we introduce the projection operators$ \hat{P}={1}_S\otimes \left|l \right\rangle \left\langle l \right| $ and$ \hat{Q}=1_S\otimes\sum_{n\neq l} \left|n \right\rangle \left\langle n \right| $ , which separate one specific state of the environment$ \left|l \right\rangle $ from other states$ \sum_{n\neq l}\left|n \right\rangle $ [39–41] and satisfy the relation$ \hat{P}+\hat{Q}={1} $ . Applying$ \hat{P} $ and$ \hat{Q} $ projection operators on the Schrödinger equation Eq. (2), respectively, one can separate the full Schrödinger equation into two equations,$ \begin{aligned}[b] {\rm i} {\rm d} P\left|\Phi_I (t) \right\rangle =& \lambda\hat{P}\hat{W}_I(t)\hat{P}\left|\Phi_I (t) \right\rangle {\rm d}t \\&+ \lambda\hat{P}\hat{W}_I(t)\hat{Q}\left|\Phi_I (t) \right\rangle {\rm d}t, \end{aligned} $
(3) $ \begin{aligned}[b] {\rm i} {\rm d}\hat{Q}\left|\Phi_I (t) \right\rangle =& \lambda\hat{Q}\hat{W}_I(t)\hat{P}\left|\Phi_I (t) \right\rangle {\rm d}t \\&+ \lambda\hat{Q}\hat{W}_I(t)\hat{Q}\left|\Phi_I (t) \right\rangle {\rm d}t, \end{aligned} $
(4) From Eq. (4) one can deduce the time evolution of the selected state
$ \hat{Q}\left|\Phi_I(\Delta t) \right\rangle $ to be,$ \begin{aligned}[b] \hat{Q}\left|\Phi_I (\Delta t) \right\rangle =& (1-{\rm i} \lambda\hat{Q}\hat{W_I}(0) \hat{Q})\left|\Phi_I (0) \right\rangle )\Delta t \\ & - {\rm i}\lambda\hat{Q}\hat{W_I}(0)\hat{P}\left|\Phi_I (0) \right\rangle \Delta t, \end{aligned} $
(5) where
$ \Delta t $ is the time step of the evolution. Substituting Eq. (5) back into the Schrödinger equation Eq. (3), one can get the equation for the projected state$ \hat{P}\left|\Phi_I(t) \right\rangle $ . The Schrödinger equation can be written in a form including different orders in the coupling strength [42, 43]. To get a simplified formula, we assume that the coupling strength λ is small and only keep the first-order interaction term temporarily in the following calculations,$ \begin{aligned}[b] {\rm i} {\rm d}\hat{P}\left|\Phi_I (t) \right\rangle =& \lambda \hat{P}\hat{W_I}(t)\hat{P}\left|\Phi_I (t) \right\rangle {\rm d}t, \\ &+ \lambda \hat{P}\hat{W_I}(t)\hat{U}(t)\hat{Q}\left|\Phi_I (0) \right\rangle {\rm d}t +\mathcal{O}(\lambda^2), \end{aligned} $
(6) where the evolution operator satisfies the relation
${\rm d}\hat{U}(t)= -{\rm i}\lambda \hat{Q}\hat{W}_I(t)\hat{Q}\hat{U}(t){\rm d}t$ . Introducing the commutation relation$ [\hat{U}(t),\hat{Q}]=0 $ and considering the expansion of$ \hat{U}(t) $ over λ in the weak coupling limit, we obtain the following equation for the selected state$ \hat{P}\left|\Phi_I(t) \right\rangle $ ,$ \begin{aligned}[b] {\rm i} {\rm d}{P}\left|\Phi_I (t) \right\rangle =& \lambda {P}{W_I}(t)P\left|\Phi_I (t) \right\rangle {\rm d}t +\lambda P W_I(t) Q\left|\Phi_I(0) \right\rangle \\ &+\mathcal{O}(\lambda^2), \end{aligned} $
(7) which describes the evolutions of the system wave function with the environment located in one specific state selected by the operator
$ \hat{P} $ . Now we consider a linear form of the interaction term$ \hat{W}_I(t)=\sum_\alpha \hat{V}_\alpha \otimes \hat{B}_\alpha $ in the SSE. After multiplying$ \left\langle l \right| $ in Eq. (7), the first term on the R.H.S becomes zero when we redefine the operator$ \hat{B}_\alpha $ to obtain the relation$ \left\langle l \right|\hat{B}_\alpha\left|l \right\rangle =0 $ . The dynamical equation for l-th mode wave function$ \varphi_I^l(t) $ becomes,$ \begin{aligned}[b] \left\langle l \right|{\rm i} d\hat{P}\left|\Phi_I (t) \right\rangle =& {\rm i} {\rm d}\varphi^l_I(t) \\ =& \lambda \sum\limits_{\alpha,n\neq l} \left\langle l \right| \hat{B_\alpha}\left|n \right\rangle \hat{V_\alpha}\left|\varphi_I^n (0) \right\rangle {\rm d}t +\mathcal{O}(\lambda^2) \\ =&\lambda \sum\limits_{\alpha,n\neq l} \left\langle l \right| \hat{B_\alpha}\left|n \right\rangle \hat{V_\alpha} {\rm e}^{-{\beta\over 2} (\epsilon_n-\epsilon_l)}{\rm e}^{{\rm i} (\theta_n-\theta_l)}\left|\varphi_I^l (0) \right\rangle {\rm d}t \\&+\mathcal{O}(\lambda^2), \end{aligned} $
(8) where the λ-terms describe the influence of different environment modes (
$ n\neq l $ ) on the wave function$ \left|\varphi_I^{l}(0) \right\rangle $ . Obtaining the last line of Eq. (8), we consider a system in an equilibrated medium, and the initial wave function of the system is considered a pure state$ \phi(0) $ . The initial full wave function of the system and the environment can then be written as$\left|\Phi_I(0) \right\rangle =\sum_n \left|\phi_I(0) \right\rangle \otimes \sqrt{{{\rm e}^{-\beta\epsilon_n}\over Z_B}} {\rm e}^{{\rm i} \theta_n}\left|n \right\rangle$ with$ \beta\equiv1/T $ , where T is the temperature. The thermal particles consisting of the medium are assumed to satisfy the Boltzmann distribution.$ \epsilon_n $ is the energy of the medium (which are thermal massless particles) located at n-th eigenstate.$ Z_B=\rm{Tr_B} e^{-\beta T} $ is the partition function.$ \theta_n $ is the phase factor in the wave function of the environment. With these setups, the initial conditions of Eq. (8) becomes$\left|\varphi_I^n(0) \right\rangle = \left|\phi_I(0) \right\rangle \sqrt{{{\rm e}^{-\beta\epsilon_n}\over Z_B}} {\rm e}^{{\rm i}\theta_n}$ . From the definition of the wave function$ \left|\varphi_I^{n (t)} \right\rangle $ , we can see that it includes both the system wave function$ \left|\phi_I(t) \right\rangle $ and the information of the environment states, which enters into the evolution of the system wave function. Considering that Eq. (7) describes the evolution of a specific wave function$ \left|\varphi_I^l \right\rangle $ , we perform an average over the different medium eigenstates to obtain the evolution of the state$ \left|\phi_I(t) \right\rangle $ , which is considered as the wave function of the system. In the Schrödinger picture, the reduced Schrödinger equation with the interactions between the system and the environment is,$ {\rm i} {{\rm d}\left|\phi(t) \right\rangle \over {\rm d}t}=\hat{H}_s\left|\phi(t) \right\rangle +\lambda \sum\limits_\alpha \gamma_\alpha(t) \hat{V}_\alpha\left|\phi(t) \right\rangle, $
(9) where
$ \gamma_\alpha $ is a stochastic noise term,$ \gamma_\alpha(t)= \sum\limits_{l,n\neq l} {1\over \sqrt{Z_B}} \left\langle l \right| \hat{B}_\alpha\left|n \right\rangle {\rm e}^{-{\beta\over 2} \epsilon_n}{\rm e}^{{\rm i}(\theta_n-\theta_l)} $
(10) and
$ \hat{H}_s $ is the Hamiltonian of the system without interactions.$ \theta_n $ is the phase factor transferred from the medium wave function to the system wave function. In the Markovian limit, the stochastic interaction is treated as white noise in the Hamiltonian. the time correlation of the random phase factors satisfies a delta function,$ \begin{array}{*{20}{l}} \langle \theta_i(t)\theta_j(t^\prime)\rangle = \Theta\delta_{ij}\delta(t-t^\prime), \end{array} $
(11) where i and j are the indices of different medium eigenstates. The random phase factor is uniformly distributed in
$ [-\pi,\pi] $ , which gives$ \Theta={\pi^2\over 3} $ . The term random phase makes the system evolve towards a uniform distribution over all the states. The other damping term${\rm e}^{-{\beta\over 2}\epsilon_n}$ makes the system evolve towards the low energy states [36]. The competition between the two factors draws the system towards the thermal distribution of the medium.Here, quark-gluon plasma as an environment is assumed to be an ideal massless gas, in which thermal particles are located in N kinds of discrete eigenstates. The wave function of the medium is expressed as
$ \left|n_1, n_2,..., n_N \right\rangle $ .$n_\xi (\xi=1,2,...,N)$ represents the number of thermal particles located at the ξ-th eigenstate with the momentum$ \xi\cdot \Delta p_{\rm en} $ , where$ \Delta p_{\rm en} $ is the momentum gap between the eigenstates. In the one-dimensional situation, the system wave function can also be expressed with a series of discrete eigenstates$ \left|\phi(t) \right\rangle =\sum_{i=0}^M c_i(t) \left|i \right\rangle $ , with the momentum step between those eigenstates to be$ \Delta p_{\rm sys} $ , and M being the total number of the system eigenstates in the numerical calculations. From its interaction, heavy quark can obtain the momentum$ \xi\cdot \Delta p_{\rm en} $ from the medium by absorbing a thermal particle at the state$ \left|n_\xi \right\rangle $ or dump energy to the medium by emitting a corresponding particle. For the latter, the medium wave function is changed from the$ \left|n_\xi \right\rangle $ to the$ \left|n_\xi +1 \right\rangle $ state, correspondingly. There is also a transition between the i-th and j-th eigenstate in heavy quark wave function under the rule$|j-i|\cdot \Delta p_{\rm sys}= \xi\cdot \Delta p_{\rm en}$ . The interaction term between the heavy quark and the medium can thus be written as,$ \hat{W} =\sum\limits_{i=1}^{M-1}\sum\limits_{j=i+1}^{M} \hat{a}_{\xi}\left|j \right\rangle \left\langle i \right| + \hat{a}^\dagger_{\xi}\left|i \right\rangle \left\langle j \right| , $
(12) where the annihilation operator
$ \hat{a}_{\xi} $ and the creation operator$ \hat{a}_{\xi}^\dagger $ change the medium state$ \left|n_1,n_2,...n_\xi... \right\rangle $ as$ \hat{a}_{\xi}\left|n_\xi \right\rangle =\sqrt{n_\xi}\left|n_\xi-1 \right\rangle $ and$ \hat{a}^{\dagger}_{\xi}\left|n_\xi \right\rangle =\sqrt{n_\xi+1}\left|n_\xi+1 \right\rangle $ . The heavy quark wave function is changed from the i-th to the j-th state according to the rule$ \xi\cdot \Delta p_{\rm en}=|j-i|\cdot \Delta p_{\rm sys} $ . To label all the variables in SSE with the index of the system eigenstates, we perform the replacement$ \epsilon_\xi=\epsilon_{ij} $ and$ \left|n_\xi \right\rangle =\left|n_{ij} \right\rangle $ according to the transition rule$ \xi\Delta p_{\rm en}= |j-i|\Delta p_{\rm sys} $ . The lowering operator$ \hat{a}_{ij} $ reduces the number of thermal particles located at the medium eigenstate$ \left|n_{\xi} \right\rangle $ , and heavy quark is shifted from the i-th to the j-th state ($ j>i $ ). The term with the raising operator$ \hat{a}^\dagger_{ij} $ represents the process of a heavy quark dumping energy into the environment by emitting a thermal particle. The SSE for heavy quark evolution as an open quantum system is then written as$\begin{aligned}[b] {\rm i} \frac{{\rm d}|\phi(t)\rangle}{{\rm d} t}=&\hat{H}_s|\phi(t)\rangle \\ & +\frac{\lambda}{\sqrt{Z_B}} \sum\limits_{i=1}^{M-1} \sum\limits_{j=i+1}^M\left[\left\langle n_{i j}-1\left|\hat{a}_{i j}\right| n_{i j}\right\rangle {\rm e}^{-\frac{\beta}{2} \epsilon_{n_{i j}}} {\rm e}^{i \theta_{i j}^{\prime}} c_i|j\rangle\right. \\ & \left.\quad+\left\langle n_{i j}+1\left|\hat{a}_{i j}^{\dagger}\right| n_{i j}\right\rangle {\rm e}^{-\frac{\beta}{2} \epsilon_{n_{i j}}} {\rm e}^{i \theta_{i j}^{\prime \prime}} c_j|i\rangle\right],\\[-13pt] \end{aligned} $
(13) where
$ \hat{H_s} $ is the Hamiltonian of a heavy quark without interactions. The heavy quark mass is considered to be 1.5 GeV. In Eq. (13),$ \theta_{ij}^\prime=\theta_{n_{ij}} - \theta_{n_{ij}-1} $ and$ \theta_{ij}^{\prime\prime}=\theta_{n_{ij}} - \theta_{n_{ij}+1} $ are the random phase factors transferred from the medium wave function to the heavy quark wave function in each interaction. We note that the i on the L.H.S of the equation represents the imaginary number, while$ i,j $ in the summation and subscript are the indexes of the heavy quark state.$ \epsilon_{n_{ij}} $ is the energy of the$ n_{ij} $ thermal particles located at the medium ξ-th eigenstate with$ \xi\Delta p_{\rm en}= |j-i|\Delta p_{\rm sys} $ . λ is the coupling constant.
Open quantum system approach for heavy quark thermalization
- Received Date: 2022-12-28
- Available Online: 2023-05-15
Abstract: We treat heavy quark as an open quantum system in a hot medium and rederive the stochastic Schrödinger equation (SSE) from the full Schrödinger equation for both heavy quarks and the medium. We apply the SSE to the dynamical evolutions of a heavy quark (as a system) in the static hot medium (as an environment). Heavy quarks interact with the medium via random scatterings, which exchange the momentum and phase factor randomly between two wave functions of the system and the environment. The exchange of momentum and phase factor results in the transition between different eigenstates of the system. These are included via an external stochastic potential in the Hamiltonian of SSE. Stochastic wave functions of a heavy quark are evolved with the stochastic external potential. The mean wave functions and corresponding momentum distributions of heavy quarks are obtained after the ensemble average over a large set of stochastic wave functions. We present the thermalization of heavy quarks in the static medium with different coupling strengths.