Physical Review Research (Aug 2023)
Krylov complexity in open quantum systems
Abstract
Krylov complexity is a measure of operator complexity that exhibits universal behavior and bounds a large class of other measures. In this paper, we generalize Krylov complexity from a closed system to an open system coupled to a Markovian bath, where Lindbladian evolution replaces Hamiltonian evolution. We show that Krylov complexity in open systems can be mapped to a non-Hermitian tight-binding model in a half-infinite chain. We discuss the properties of the non-Hermitian terms and show that the strengths of the non-Hermitian terms increase linearly with the increase of the Krylov basis index n. Such a non-Hermitian tight-binding model can exhibit localized edge modes that determine the long-time behavior of Krylov complexity. Hence, the growth of Krylov complexity is suppressed by dissipation, and at long times, Krylov complexity saturates at a finite value much smaller than that of a closed system with the same Hamiltonian. Our conclusions are supported by numerical results on several models, such as the Sachdev-Ye-Kitaev model and the interacting fermion model. Our work provides insights for discussing complexity, chaos, and holography for open quantum systems.