1. Introduction
The squared modulus of the overlap between two pure quantum states
and
, gives a quantitative indicator of how indistinguishable those two states are. When
, the two states are perfectly distinguishable; on the other extreme situation, when
, the two states are totally indistinguishable from each other. In this latter case, the kets
and
actually represent the same physical state of the system. This varying degree of distinguishability between quantum states has deep consequences for quantum physics. In particular, it allows for physically appealing and mathematically clear formulations of the time-energy uncertainty principle. In fact, there are energy related lower bounds for the time
required by a closed quantum system to evolve from an initial pure state to a final state orthogonal to the initial one [
1]. The time
satisfies the inequality
, where
is the energy uncertainty. This inequality, discovered by Mandelstam and Tamm [
2], can be regarded as a form of the time-energy uncertainty relation. Another lower bound for
, in terms of the expectation value
(where
is the Hamiltonian of the system and
the system’s ground state energy) was discovered by Margolus and Levitin [
3].
In the context of quantum computation, the time
that a system takes to evolve towards an orthogonal state can be regarded as the time needed to perform an elementary computational step. This orthogonality time is connected with several fundamental aspects of quantum physics, with important implications for the field of quantum information [
4,
5,
6,
7,
8,
9,
10,
11]. Now, when studying problems related to the
speed of quantum evolution as measured by
in systems evolving continuously in time, it is imperative to bear in mind the following points: (i) Most initial states never evolve into an orthogonal state. In fact, the initial states that do evolve to an orthogonal state constitute a subset of measure zero of the space of all states. (ii) Even for states that do evolve to an orthogonal state, the number of times that the system reaches a state orthogonal to the initial one within an interval
of finite duration is itself finite. From these two observations, it follows that the orthogonality time
, despite its great conceptual value, is not directly applicable in many relevant situations. For most initial states, the orthogonality time is infinite and, consequently, it cannot be used to characterize the speed of evolution. A possible alternative procedure is to study the time needed to reach a state having a certain non-vanishing overlap with the initial state. However, and in contrast with the situation of zero overlap, there are no physical or mathematical criteria to choose one non-vanishing value of the overlap as more fundamental than another. Consequently, it makes sense to explore other approaches that democratically take into account all the possible overlap values.
Motivated by above considerations, instead of focusing on the time needed to reach complete distinguishability between two states of an evolving quantum system, we focus on the average distinguishability between pairs of states of the system at different times. In doing so, we advance a measure of the amount of quantum evolution that is applicable to any initial state—whether or not it evolves to an orthogonal state—and does not privilege any particular value of the overlap between states at different times. We thus consider the amount of evolution exhibited during a time interval , interpreted as a measure of how varied is the life of the quantum system during that time interval. We investigate the main properties of the measure , establish its relevant bounds, and study in detail its behavior for some particular quantum systems. Further, we consider an entropic variational problem that determines the quantum states that evolve the most, i.e., that maximize the asymptotic value of , under given energy resources. It should be mentioned that we do not propose to favor the measure over the orthogonality time . We advance this measure as a complement to , that may help to study aspects of the evolution of quantum systems that are not fully captured by the concept of orthogonality time.
The paper is organized as follows: In
Section 2, we introduce a quantitative measure
for the amount of quantum evolution and discuss some of its properties. In particular, we investigate the dependence of
on the length
T of the time interval
and show that
is always less than or equal to its asymptotic limit value
. We also discuss the conditions under which
actually attains the value
. In
Section 3, we study in detail the behavior of the measure
for different examples of quantum systems, showing that for time intervals with a duration given by a small number of characteristic times steps
the measure
can be well approximated by its asymptotic limit
. A brief discussion on the relation of the amount of evolution with the
timeless approach to quantum dynamics is presented in
Section 4. In
Section 5, through an entropic approach, we determine the quantum systems optimizing the amount of quantum evolution under constraints given by fixed mean energy,
. Further, we analyze the behavior of the amount of evolution on
for the examples considered before, and finally a discussion and some final remarks are drawn in
Section 6.
2. Quantitative Measure for the Amount of Quantum Evolution
As mentioned above, we advance and study the properties of a measure for the amount of evolution of a quantum system during a given time interval. Before proceeding, it is worth going over the physical motivations behind this proposal. The concept of distinguishability of quantum states is central to quantum physics. The existence of different degrees of distinguishability between pure states is at the basis of some of the most non-classical features of quantum mechanics. In fact, the classical counterparts of pure states (described by points in a classical phase-space) are in principle always perfectly distinguishable from each other. The notion of distinguishability between quantum states is particularly important in quantum information and quantum computation, and many of the central ideas in these fields are ultimately rooted in the concept of distinguishability between states. Such concept leads naturally to the idea of an orthogonality time, which is the time required for a quantum system to evolve into a state that is perfectly distinguishable from the initial one. The orthogonality time, in its turn, has great importance both from the fundamental and the practical points of view. Among its multiple applications, there is the intriguing possibility of characterizing the richness of the evolution experienced by a quantum system using the total number of successive orthogonal states visited by the system in a given time interval. From the computational viewpoint, which construes physical systems as information processing systems, such number can be regarded as the number of elementary computational steps performed during the system’s evolution. In other words, it provides an estimation of the computational capacity of the system. This is an interesting and potentially deep way of interpreting the evolution of a physical system. However, this point of view is not applicable in those cases in which the system never reaches an orthogonal state. Considering this, we propose here an alternative and complementary approach that is applicable to all initial states, even to those that do not evolve into states orthogonal to the initial state. Our approach is based, in a straightforward way, on the fact that pure states admit different degrees of distinguishability. In a nutshell, we propose, as a complement to both the orthogonality time and to the associated total number of computational steps, to use a measure of the amount of evolution of a system given by the average distinguishability of the system’s states as it evolves. This average distinguishability provides a quantitative assessment of how diverse are the states that the system visits during a given time interval. In other words, it provides a measure of the amount of evolution associated with that time interval. It is in itself an interesting feature of quantum mechanics that the above intuitive ideas can be cast immediately into a quantitative mathematical form. As we show below, the concomitant measure is mathematically well defined, has a transparent intuitive meaning, and has nice mathematical and physical properties.
As a quantitative measure of how much evolution a quantum system experiences during the time interval
, we adopt the time average of
, where
and
represent, respectively, the states of the system at times
t and
, with
. The amount of quantum evolution during the time interval
is therefore
where
. The time-dependent pure state
obeys the Schrödinger equation
,
being the system’s Hamiltonian operator, which is assumed to be time-independent. The overlap
measures the indistinguishability between the quantum states at different times: zero overlap corresponds to perfectly distinguishable states, whereas overlap equal to one corresponds to identical—up to a global phase—states. This justifies the interpretation of
as a measure of the degree of variety, or evolvedness of the state
over the interval
. High (close to 1) values of
imply a highly evolved state, such that
is highly distinguishable from any other
, whereas low values of
reflect little variation of
with respect to
.
Let us consider the measure
of quantum evolution corresponding to the time interval
,
Making the change of integration variables
and
(i.e.,
), we have
and the limits of integration take the form
, whence
where in the last line we change the names of the integration (dummy) variables
. Taking now the derivative of
with respect to
, we get
In the last step, we use the relation
which is a consequence of the fact that unitary quantum evolution preserves the overlap between states. It thus follows from Equation (
4) that the measure
satisfies a time-translation symmetry,
and consequently depends on the time interval
only through its length
. This means that we can always refer to the interval
without loss of generality, and write
in the more succinct form
, stressing that
is a function of
T only.
The state
can be represented in an appropriate configuration-space basis
as
The label
appearing in the states
designates the coordinates of a set of particles, or any other relevant degrees of freedom characterizing the physical system under consideration. The wave function
evolves according to
and can be expanded as follows
in terms of the (orthonormal) eigenfunctions of
, namely
, with corresponding eigenvalues
. According to the normalization condition, we have
. Throughout the paper, we deal with quantum systems having discrete energy spectra
. However, our discussion is not restricted to discrete systems; it applies also to systems with continuous variables having discrete energy spectra, such as harmonic oscillators or, more generally, confined many-particle systems.
Equations (
7) and (
9) lead to
whence Equation (
1) gives
where we define
.
Equation (12) gives
explicitly in terms of the expansion coefficients
of the initial state
. It implies that, for all values of
T, one has
, where
stands for the asymptotic value:
It also follows from Equation (12) that is actually reached for finite T whenever vanishes for all n and m.
The magnitude of the deviation of
from its asymptotic value reads
For fixed
(i.e., for each separate term in the sum), the function
decays very rapidly, its main contribution lying within the interval
, or equivalently in the interval
, where
is the natural period (characteristic time) corresponding to the frequency
. Consequently, after a few natural periods,
becomes negligible, and for
the deviation in Equation (
13) is basically zero, meaning that the evolution has effectively reached its asymptotic, stationary, value. In the following section, we compute explicitly Equation (12) and analyze its behavior for different systems of interest.
4. The Amount of Evolution and Its Relation to the Timeless Picture of Quantum Dynamics
It is worth discussing briefly the relevance that the present discussion has within the
timeless approach to quantum dynamics [
14], which is nowadays quite in vogue (see, for instance, [
15,
16] and references therein). Basically, the timeless picture considers a closed bipartite system composed of a
clock C, whose hands’ position eigenbasis is
, plus a system
R—referred to as the
rest of the universe—whose degrees of freedom are represented by
. It further assumes that
are in the global pure stationary state (normalized to 1 over the time interval
)
, and regards the wave function
as the state of
R given that the clock’s hands read
t. Thus,
R corresponds to the system we are studying.
Since the global state
is pure, the degree of mixedness of the marginal, reduced density matrix
describing the system constitutes a quantitative indicator of the amount of quantum correlations between
C and
R. This density matrix is computed by taking the partial trace of the complete density matrix state
over the degrees of freedom of the clock, i.e.,
. The degree of mixedness of
, as measured by the linear entropy
, is thus a convenient measure of the quantum correlations between the system and the clock. The linear entropy
is then given by
Comparing Equations (26) and (
1) shows that the measure
of the amount of evolution experienced by a quantum system in the time interval
corresponds, from the timeless point of view, to the amount of quantum correlations between the clock and the system. Moreover, Equation (
25) is an expression similar to the one that has been used to study entanglement in continuous systems, such as atomic systems (see [
17,
18] and references therein). Note that the marginal density matrix
is actually the time average of the state
. That is,
. Consequently, the measure
is equal to the linear entropy of the time-averaged quantum state of the “rest of the universe”. This is consistent with the interpretation of
as a quantitative indicator of how diverse are the states that the system visits during the time interval
.
We do not pursue this subject further, because the timeless picture of quantum dynamics is not the focus of the present work. It is worth mentioning, however, that our previous results indicate that in the timeless picture, as the length
T of the time-interval increases, the quantum correlation between the system and the clock quickly approaches the asymptotic value
. Therefore, for all practical purposes, one can assume that the amount of clock-system quantum correlations has the value
. This assumption is inescapable when the timeless picture is adopted as a fundamental explanation of the nature of time [
15] since, within the timeless conceptual framework, the interval
is regarded as covering the entire history of the
rest of the universe.
5. Entropic Variational Approach to Quantum States Exhibiting Maximum Amount of Evolution
We show in
Section 3 that
tends to reach its asymptotic value sufficiently fast, so we can say that (for all practical purposes) the amount of evolution
can be well approximated by its asymptotic limit
. Under this assumption, we now investigate the states that maximize
under the constraint of fixed mean energy
(recall that
depends on the initial state
). The optimal states arising from this variational problem are those that evolve the most under given energy resources.
Let us start from the expression (Equation (
12)) for the asymptotic value of
, and write
where in the last equality we use that the condition
is equivalent to
. Let us designate by
the succession, in increasing order, of
different energy values appearing in the set
of energy eigenvalues. Note that, while some of the
s may be equal due to degeneracy, all the
s are different, and satisfy the strict inequalities,
. Moreover, in contrast to what happens with the
s, the index
i appearing in
does not refer to the eigenvalue of the Hamiltonian’s
ith eigenstate, but rather labels a particular value among the set of energy eigenvalues. Thus, for example, if we consider a system with a Hamiltonian that has four eigenstates with corresponding eigenvalues
,
, and
, one has
,
, and
. Now, with this notation, Equation (
27) is rewritten as
where
is given by
The quantity is the probability of getting the particular value when measuring the system’s energy. Notice that already takes into account any possible degeneracy, so that P is a probability distribution of energy values, not a probability distribution of energy eigenstates.
Now, to the probability distribution
P, there corresponds a linear entropy
defined as
whence Equation (
28) gives
so that
, meaning that the amount of evolution of a quantum system coincides with the linear entropy associated to its energy distribution. It is worth mentioning that
coincides with the power-law non-additive entropy
corresponding to
[
19,
20]. The
entropies of a normalized probability distribution
are defined as
, and constitute useful tools for the analysis of diverse problems both in classical and in quantum physics (see, for example, [
20,
21,
22,
23] and references therein). Notice that, in the present application of the
entropies, the particular value
is an inevitable consequence of the structure of the inner product in Hilbert space, which provides a natural way to assess the distinguishability between quantum pure states. The problem considered in the present work illustrates the fact that non-standard or generalized entropies [
24,
25] arise naturally in the study of physical systems or processes.
We now investigate the quantum states that optimize the evolution measure for a given mean energy. Such optimal states can be regarded as those that evolve the most under given energy resources, and have an energy distribution
that maximizes
under the constraints imposed by fixed
and the normalization condition
. Usually, the constrained optimization of the
entropies is performed resorting to the method of Lagrange multipliers [
19]. In the present (
) case, however, we follow an alternative path, leading to a direct proof that a particular probability distribution is optimal. As explained below, this direct proof has some advantages, although its final result is of course equivalent to the one obtained using Lagrange multipliers.
To analyze the states that maximize the measure
, we start by considering the energy probability distribution
with
b a real parameter with dimensions of inverse energy,
the Heaviside step function
and
a a (real, positive) normalization parameter
that guarantees that
. Equation (
32) then defines a monoparametric family of probability distributions parameterized by
b. Recall that
is a probability over energy values and not over the Hamiltonian’s eigenstates. In what follows, we prove that the probability distribution
is the one maximizing the entropy
, among all the normalized probability distributions
leading to the same mean energy as
.
Let
be a normalized probability distribution having the same value of
as
, that is,
We prove that
. Let
. Then,
Let us consider the second term in the right hand side of the above equation, and rewrite it in the form
By virtue of Equations (
35), the first summation appearing after the second equal sign in Equation (
37) vanishes. Thus, we obtain,
The last inequality in Equation (
38), together with Equation (
36), implies that
and, consequently, that
. This means that the energy probability distribution
given by Equations (
32)–(
34) is the solution to the constrained variational problem of optimizing the entropic functional
under the constraints in Equation (
35).
It follows from the above discussion that, assuming
T to be long enough so that
, the states that maximize the amount of evolution under the constraint of fixed
are those whose energy distribution has the form given by Equation (
32). These are the states that, for a given mean energy
, and over long enough time intervals, maximize the time-averaged distinguishability between the system states at different times. These optimal states can be regarded as those that exhibit the largest amount of dynamical evolution for a given mean energy. Figuratively, one can say that such states use their energy resources in an optimal way, in the sense of leading the most varied possible life for the given energy mean value. They make the most of their energy.
The energy probability distribution in Equations (
32)–(
34) associated with the optimal states is determined by a single parameter
b that determines the cut-off energy
(for energies
, one has
). The energy expectation value
and the measure of amount of evolution
, when evaluated on the optimal states, become functions of the parameter
b, and are given by
and
Notice that the quantities
,
,
, are all continuous functions of the parameter
b. Equations (
39) and (
40) determine in parametric form the function
), which is also continuous. Unfortunately, in general, it is not possible to eliminate the parameter
b from the pair of Equations (
39) and (
40), and express the optimal
directly in terms of
. However, we can calculate the derivative
with respect to
as follows.
According to the way we defined the succession
, it is plain that
, and that in the energy interval
there are no energy eigenvalues. Consequently, for values of the parameter
b such that
the quantities
,
,
, and
are not only continuous but also differentiable functions of
b. Then, we get
On the other hand, from Equation (
40), we have
where we use Equation (
41), and the normalization condition. This gives finally
Equation (
43) holds for all values of
b within an interval of the form
, corresponding to the window of energy values
. In fact, Equation (
43) holds for
all the successive intervals
. Moreover, since the quantity
is a continuous function of
b, it follows that the value of
at the end of each of those intervals matches precisely its value at the beginning of the next one. In other words, Equation (
43) holds for the entire range of values of
b.
Equation (
43) resembles the well-known thermodynamical relation
associated with the Gibbs canonical ensemble that connects entropy, energy and temperature (proportional to
). Within this thermodynamical analogy, the quantity
plays the role of an inverse temperature-like quantity.
It is worth discussing briefly the Lagrange multipliers approach to the constrained variational problem of optimizing
. Introducing the Lagrange multipliers
and
, corresponding, respectively, to the constraints of normalization and mean energy, one gets the variational problem
having the stationary solution:
If one adds to the above Lagrange-based result the Tsallis’ cut-off prescription [
19], namely
if
, one can readily see that Equation (
45) coincides with Equation (
32), if one makes the identifications,
This is consistent with our previous finding that formally plays a role akin to an inverse temperature-like quantity, since it is the Lagrange multiplier associated to the energy constraint, similar to what happens within the Jaynes maximum entropy formulation of statistical mechanics.
The approach to the constrained optimization of
discussed above yields, unlike the Lagrange-multipliers one, a direct proof that the particular distribution
, with the cut-off explicitly included, maximizes the quantity
under the relevant constraints. On the other hand, the application of the Lagrange multipliers method to this particular problem provides only the structure in Equation (
45) of a stationary solution, without indicating explicitly the the cut-off. Within the Lagrange method, the cut-off prescription, and the maximum condition, are issues that require to be discussed and analyzed after deriving the form of
.
To gain some intuitive understanding on the maximum entropy distribution in Equation (
32), it is worth considering the statistical meaning of the linear entropy
given by Equation (
30). This measure has a clear statistical interpretation: if one measures the energy of two identically prepared copies of our system, the linear entropy in Equation (
30) equals the probability of getting different results in these two measurements. In this sense,
can be regarded as a measure of
diversity: diversity in the way that the different energy eigenvalues are represented in the quantum state under consideration. We may mention here that the linear entropy is indeed used as a diversity index in biology, sometimes referred to as the Gini–Simpson index of diversity. This interpretation of
makes physical sense within our present work, since the situation of zero
energy diversity corresponds to an energy eigenstate, which is a state that basically does not evolve. Now, we can reconsider the maximum entropy distribution in Equation (
32). It results from an optimization process involving two conflicting requirements: to make the energy diversity as large as possible, while keeping the mean energy constant. This problem has some mathematical similarities with the entropy optimization process leading to the canonical Gibbs distribution in statistical mechanics, where one has to optimize the standard logarithmic entropy while keeping the average energy constant. In both cases, one obtains a set of probabilities that are decreasing functions of the energy. However, while the Gibbs distribution follows an exponential law, the distribution in Equation (
32) is linear in the energy.
Examples
We now explore the behavior of
as a function of
, and other features of the optimal states, for the examples studied in
Section 3. All curves obtained correspond to the states that evolve the most (have the optimal value
of the measure
) for a given value of their corresponding mean energy
.
In the particular case of the qubit system with energies
and
, the dependence of
on
admits an explicit analytical expression. In this case, one has
and
, for positive values of
b in the range
(all values
correspond to the ground state, having
). These expressions lead to
and
Resorting to Equation (
43) expressed as
, we then have
where, for
, the mean energy is within the range
.
Figure 6 (top left) illustrates this behavior for
.
For the other cases of study, there is no analytical expression for
, whence the dependence of
on
is determined in parametric form according to Equations (
39) and (
40). For the
d-level harmonic oscillator of
Section 3.2, the energy levels are given by
(recall that we put
).
Figure 6 (top right) is obtained considering equally weighted states of the form in Equation (
19) for various values of the mean energy (corresponding to different values of
d). The two-qubit case of
Section 3.3, with energies
, leads to the curve depicted in
Figure 6 (bottom left), taking
. Finally,
Figure 6 (bottom right) corresponds to the Gaussian wave packet of
Section 3.4, with energy levels
.
The curves in
Figure 6 depict the minimum value of
required to achieve a given value of
. That is, they provide information about the minimum energy resources (as assessed by the mean energy) needed to reach a given amount of quantum evolution. They also illustrate the intuitively appealing fact that a physical system needs energy to lead an eventful life. Notice further that the regions of the plane above the curves depicted in
Figure 6 are forbidden: there are no physical states represented there.
It transpires from the results in
Figure 6 that the detailed dependence of
on
differs for systems with different energy spectra. However, it is observed that for various systems such dependence exhibits the same general qualitative features. For example, all curves exhibit a monotonously increasing behavior of
as a function of
, corresponding to a positive value of the temperature-like quantity
. The curves depicted also have a definite concavity. This implies that the amount of evolution and the energy resources obey a relation of diminishing returns: as the mean energy increases, further increments of the energy resources become less efficient in incrementing the amount of evolution.
6. Discussion
We investigated a quantitative measure of the amount of evolution experienced by a time-dependent pure state of a quantum system during a time interval . This measure is given by the average distinguishability between the states of the system at different instants . The measure is well-defined for systems evolving under an arbitrary Hamiltonian, which can or cannot depend explicitly on time. Here, we focused on quantum systems governed by a time-independent Hamiltonian; in that case, we found that the measure satisfies a time-translation symmetry: , meaning that depends on the time interval only through its duration . In addition, for a given initial state , the measure is, for all time intervals, always less or equal to its asymptotic limit value , given by the linear entropy of the energy probability distribution , which determines the probability of getting the value E when measuring the energy of the state . As T increases, the measure quickly reaches values arbitrarily close to the the asymptotic value . Consequently, except for relatively short-time intervals, one can assume that the measure of the amount of evolution acquires the value , which can be regarded as typical.
Using the approximation for the amount of evolution, we investigated the quantum states that evolve the most under given energy resources. That is, we investigated the states that optimize under the constraint imposed by the expectation value of the energy. The energy probability distribution of the optimal states, namely , has a maximum entropy form: it maximizes the linear entropy, which is the power-law non-additive entropy measure (for ), under the constraints given by normalization and the mean value of the energy. This implies that the optimal amount of evolution () exhibited by the optimal states is related to their mean energy through a thermostatistical-like formalism.
Our analysis of the measure
of the amount of quantum evolution led to a maximum entropy scheme for determining pure states evolving the most under given energy resources. The concomitant entropic measure is evaluated on a probability distribution based on the squared modulus of the coefficients obtained when expanding the state in the energy eigenbasis (see Equation (
29)). Entropic formalisms for pure states, based on entropies evaluated on the squared modulus of the coefficients obtained when expanding the states in some particular basis of interest, have been previously considered in the literature [
26,
27,
28]. This type of formalism has been advanced, for instance, in connection with the inference of pure states from partial prior information [
26], and for developing a thermodynamic-like description of the ground state of quantum systems [
27,
28]. Entropies have also been associated with pure states in some approaches to the foundations of quantum mechanics [
29].
There are several questions one can ask when analyzing the time limitations associated with quantum evolution. One can ask: For how long does one have to wait in order to see something happening? This is the basic question addressed by studies on the quantum speed limit. An alternative and complementary question to ask is: How much happens during a certain amount of time?. This is the main question addressed in this work. Besides their intrinsic interest, the time limitations associated with quantum evolution also have practical implications. In that regard, we hope that our present developments may be relevant for the investigation of the limits imposed by nature on the processing of information by quantum systems. Any further advances along these lines will be welcome.