Holonomy and Complementarity in Open Quantum Systems
Abstract
Complementarity relations constrain the distribution of coherence, predictability, and openness in quantum systems. Here we show that, in open quantum systems, these local constraints acquire a geometric interpretation through quasistatic transport. For a driven dissipative qubit, the complementarity variables define cylindrical coordinates on the Bloch sphere, while openness appears geometrically as a radial deficit associated with reduction from a larger Hilbert space. Quasistatic driving indu...
Description / Details
Complementarity relations constrain the distribution of coherence, predictability, and openness in quantum systems. Here we show that, in open quantum systems, these local constraints acquire a geometric interpretation through quasistatic transport. For a driven dissipative qubit, the complementarity variables define cylindrical coordinates on the Bloch sphere, while openness appears geometrically as a radial deficit associated with reduction from a larger Hilbert space. Quasistatic driving induces a work connection on the resulting steady-state manifold whose curvature determines the cyclic response. Hamiltonian-aligned dissipation produces an exact work connection and vanishing cyclic work, whereas fixed pointer-basis dissipation generates non-integrable transport, finite curvature, and holonomic response. The resulting curvature admits a phase-resolved representation on the triality manifold and develops perturbatively with pointer--Hamiltonian mismatch. In the weak-mismatch limit, the curvature is governed by a competition between coherence-preserving and pure-dephasing channels, producing symmetry-related positive- and negative-curvature sectors. These results establish a direct connection between complementarity, dissipation, and geometric thermodynamic response, and show that cyclic quasistatic work provides an operational probe of nonequilibrium quantum geometry.
Source: arXiv:2605.10800v1 - http://arxiv.org/abs/2605.10800v1 PDF: https://arxiv.org/pdf/2605.10800v1 Original Link: http://arxiv.org/abs/2605.10800v1
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May 12, 2026
Quantum Computing
Quantum Physics
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