We study the non-Markovian effect on the dynamics of the quantum discord by
exactly solving a model consisting of two independent qubits subject to two
zero-temperature non-Markovian reservoirs, respectively. Considering the two
qubits initially prepared in Bell-like or extended Werner-like states, we show
that there is no occurrence of the sudden death, but only instantaneous
disappearance of the quantum discord at some time points, in comparison to the
entanglement sudden death in the same range of the parameters of interest. It
implies that the quantum discord is more useful than the entanglement to
describe quantum correlation involved in quantum systems.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
Abstract. This paper is devoted to the study of harmonic analysis on quantum tori. We consider several summation methods on these tori, including the square Fejér means, square and circular Poisson means, and Bochner-Riesz means. We first establish the maximal inequalities for these means, then obtain the corresponding pointwise convergence theorems. In particular, we prove the noncommutative analogue of the classical Stein theorem on Bochner-Riesz means. The second part of the paper deals with Fourier multipliers on quantum tori. We prove that the completely bounded Lp Fourier multipliers on a quantum torus are exactly those on the classical torus of the same dimension. Finally, we present the Littlewood-Paley theory associated with the circular Poisson semigroup on quantum tori. We show that the Hardy spaces in this setting possess the usual properties of Hardy spaces, as one can expect. These include the quantum torus analogue of Fefferman's H 1 -BMO duality theorem and interpolation theorems. Our analysis is based on the recent developments of noncommutative martingale/ergodic inequalities and Littlewood-Paley-Stein theory.
We prove that atomic decomposition for the Hardy spaces h 1 and H 1 is valid for noncommutative martingales. We also establish that the conditioned Hardy spaces of noncommutative martingales h p and bmo form interpolation scales with respect to both complex and real interpolations.
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