Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Elements of magnetism
- 3 Elements of superconductivity
- 4 Brownian motion
- 5 Models for quantum dissipation
- 6 Implementation of the propagator approach
- 7 The damped harmonic oscillator
- 8 Dissipative quantum tunneling
- 9 Dissipative coherent tunneling
- 10 Outlook
- Appendix A Path integrals, the quantum mechanical propagator, and density operators
- Appendix B The Markovian master equation
- Appendix C Coherent-state representation
- Appendix D Euclidean methods
- References
- Index
10 - Outlook
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 April 2014
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Elements of magnetism
- 3 Elements of superconductivity
- 4 Brownian motion
- 5 Models for quantum dissipation
- 6 Implementation of the propagator approach
- 7 The damped harmonic oscillator
- 8 Dissipative quantum tunneling
- 9 Dissipative coherent tunneling
- 10 Outlook
- Appendix A Path integrals, the quantum mechanical propagator, and density operators
- Appendix B The Markovian master equation
- Appendix C Coherent-state representation
- Appendix D Euclidean methods
- References
- Index
Summary
Having achieved this point we hope to have accomplished, at least partly, our main aim which was to convince the reader that once appropriate systems have been found (or built) they can present a very peculiar combination of microscopic parameters in such a way that quantum mechanics should be applied to general macroscopic variables to describe the collective effects therein. Moreover, the very nature of these macroscopic variables does not allow them to be treated in an isolated fashion. They must rather be considered coupled to uncontrollable microscopic degrees of freedom which is the ultimate origin of dissipative phenomena. The latter, at least in the great majority of cases, play a very deleterious role in the dynamics of the macroscopic variables and we hope to have introduced minimal phenomenological techniques in order to quantify this.
We have concentrated our discussions on questions originating from a few examples of superconducting or magnetic systems where quantum mechanics and dissipative effects coexist. In particular, superconducting devices which present the possibility of displaying several different quantum effects (quantum interference, decay by quantum tunneling, or coherent tunneling) are of special importance, as we will see below. Prior to development of the modern cryogenic techniques and/or the ability to build nanometric devices, it was unthinkable to imagine the existence of subtle quantum mechanical effects such as the entanglement of macroscopically distinct quantum states.
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- Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2014