Open Quantum Dynamics: Memory Effects and Superactivation of Backflow of Information

We investigate the divisibility properties of the tensor products $\Lambda^{(1)}_t\otimes\Lambda^{(2)}_t$ of open quantum dynamics $\Lambda^{(1,2)}_t$ with time-dependent generators. These dynamical maps emerge from a compound open system $S_1+S_2$ that interacts with its own environment in such a way that memory effects remain when the environment is traced away. This study is motivated by the following intriguing effect: one can have Backflow of Information (BFI) from the environment to $S_1+S_2$ without the same phenomenon occurring for either $S_1$ and $S_2$. We shall refer to this effect as the Superactivation of BFI (SBFI).


Introduction
An open quantum system S is a system interacting with its environment in such a way that its time-evolution can be approximated by a so-called reduced dynamics.The latter is described using completely positive dynamical maps Λ t , t ≥ 0, on the space of states S(S) that can be obtained by eliminating the environment and operating suitable approximations in order to effectively take into account its presence.The Markovian character, that is, the lack of memory effects, of the reduced dynamics was initially identified with Λ t being generated by time-independent generators L, Λ t = exp(t L), thus giving rise to one-parameter semigroups.In the case of bounded L, their general structure was fully characterized by Gorini, Kossakowski, Sudarshan [1] and Lindblad [2] (GKSL generators).Completely positive semigroups can be rigorously obtained from a microscopic model by means of approximation techniques known as weak coupling limit [3], singular coupling limit [4] and low-density limit [5].In such a scenario, the dominant feature is decoherence associated with the fact that information can only flow from the open system to its environment with no possibility of being retrieved.Decoherence is a major source of difficulties in many concrete applications such as quantum computation, quantum communication and in general quantum technologies.Instead, memory effects have been thought to counteract decoherence by allowing information to flow back from the environment to the system immersed in it and may thus be beneficial in many applications [6], such as quantum information processing [7], quantum metrology [8] and teleportation [9].
In recent years, indeed, much effort has been devoted to extending the very concept of Markovianity beyond the semigroup scenario (see [10] for a recent comprehensive review).The need for such an extension was pointed to in [11], where non-Markovianity was identified with Backflow of Information (BFI) from the environment to the open system and associated with revival in the time of the distinguishability between two time-evolving states.
In [12], a case was presented where a dynamics Λ t not exposing BFI relatively to a single open quantum system did instead show BFI when accompanied by an independently evolving copy of itself.In other words, it was shown that, even if Λ t does not show BFI, Λ t ⊗ Λ t might show it.This phenomenon can be dubbed the Superactivation of Backflow of Information (SBFI).
As observed above, its physical importance lies in that, by doubling a time-evolving quantum system, the decoherence effects can be diminished in the statistically coupled parties with respect to the single ones.The microscopic origins of SBFI, similar to the superactivation of capacity, are not yet fully explained.Indeed, they are as hard to retrieve from a microscopic system-environment interaction as BFI itself.What can be certainly ascertained, as will be explained in a forthcoming paper, is that the phenomenon is not a classical one as it is connected with the presence of non-classical correlations in the open system, not necessarily, however, unlike for the superactivation of capacity [13,14], with entanglement.Moreover, a collision model derivation connects it to correlations distributed between the system and its environment [15].
In the following, we shall consider various scenarios in which SBFI occurs for local, factorized dynamics Λ (1) t , expanding on the results of [12].The structure of the paper is as follows.In Section 2, after a survey of the two major approaches to quantum non-Markovianity, namely, the one based on the divisibility of the dynamics and the one based on BFI, we shall review the results of [12] and extend them to the tensor products of two different dynamical maps.Finally, in Section 3, the emergence of SBFI in mixtures of pure dephasing qubit dynamics will be considered, with the particular aim of investigating the stability of such a memory effect against local perturbations of one of the two dissipative evolutions.

Non-Markovianity: Divisibility and BFI
In what follows, we shall be concerned with one-parameter families of physically legitimate dynamical maps {Λ t } t≥0 , that is, with completely positive maps on the state space of a d-dimensional system generated by time-local master equations of the form where L t is the time-local generator, given by L t = d dt Λ t • Λ −1 t whenever Λ −1 t exists.When the generator is time-independent, L t = L, the dynamics is a one-parameter semigroup, Λ t = e tL , obeying the composition law Moreover [16], L has the Gorini-Kossakowski-Sudarshan-Lindblad (GKSL) form where K = [K ij ] is a Hermitian positive semidefinite matrix, known as a Kossakowski matrix, and the operators F j , j ̸ = 0, form a Hilbert-Schmidt orthonormal basis of traceless operators, Tr(F † i F j ) = δ ij , with the addition of the identity If the generator is time-dependent, then the generated dynamics emerges from a time-ordered exponential and becomes a two-parameter semigroup of maps However, the mere time dependence of the generator is no longer considered strong enough to characterize bona fide non-Markovianity, that is, true memory effects.

Non-Markovianity: Lack of CP-Divisibility
One approach to non-Markovianity is based on the notion of divisibility [17,10].
Definition 1.The dynamics {Λ t } t≥0 is called divisible if for all t ≥ s ≥ 0 there exists an intertwining two-parameter family of maps {Λ t,s } t≥s≥0 such that Λ t = Λ t,s • Λ s .If, for all 0 ≤ s ≤ t, Λ t,s is positive, the dynamics is called P-divisible, while, if Λ t,s is completely positive, the dynamics is called CP-divisible.
Definition 2 (RHP criterion).{Λ t } t≥0 is Markovian if and only if it is CP-divisible.
The time-local generator of a one-parameter family of trace-preserving maps can always be written as in (2) with Hamiltonian H(t) and Kossakowski matrix both depending on time, the latter being only Hermitian.The GKSL characterization of completely positive semigroups fails for time-dependent generators; indeed, there can be completely positive dynamics with generators characterized by non-positive semidefinite Kossakowski matrices (see Example 1 below).Nevertheless, the GKSL characterization has the following extension to the time-dependent case which regards not the complete positivity of the generated maps, but rather their CP-divisibility [17], its indirect proof being given in Remark 3 below as a corollary of Proposition 4.
Unlike for completely positive maps that are identified using their Kraus-Stinespring structure Λ[ρ] = α L α ρ L † α , the lack of a general form of only positive ones hampers in general the characterization of P-divisible maps that are not CP-divisible.The most general assertion concerning them is contained in the following lemma [10,19].
Example 1.The above lemma permits us to control the P-divisibility of qubit dynamics consisting of the so-called Pauli maps which are generated by master equations of the form with λ > 0 and σ α , α = 1, 2, 3 the Pauli matrices.The generator is of the form (2) with no Hamiltonian contribution, d = 2, F α = σ α / √ 2 and a diagonal, time-dependent Kossakowski matrix given by the so-called rates γ α (t).Because of Proposition 1, then, γ α (t) ≥ 0, α = 1, 2, 3, is equivalent to the CP-divisibility of the Pauli maps.Moreover, γ α (t) ≥ 0 is sufficient but not necessary in order to have a legitimate completely positive Pauli dynamics.
The P-divisibility of the latter maps can be fully characterized by using (4) in (3), yielding for all orthogonal |ϕ⟩ , |ψ⟩ ∈ C 2 .Choosing them to be the eigenstates of σ α , α = 1, 2, 3, one obtains These three necessary conditions are also sufficient for P-divisibility [20,21]; indeed, the generators L t in (4) at different times commute so that, from and thus the intertwiners Therefore, the conditions (6) enforce the exponential decay of the Pauli matrices and thus the positivity of Λ t,s [ρ S ] for all qubit density matrices ρ S , namely, the P-divisibility of the dynamical maps Λ t , t ≥ 0.
As a simple concrete instance, let us choose γ 1 (t) = γ 2 (t) = 1 and γ 3 (t) = sin(ω t).Then, given an initial density matrix in the Bloch representation, where (r 1 , r 2 , r 3 ) ∈ R 3 with norm not larger than 1, one finds Since sin(ω t) can be negative, Λ t cannot be CP-divisible; however, 1 + sin(ω t) ≥ 0 makes it P-divisible.To see whether Λ t represents a physically legitimate, that is, completely positive, evolution, one checks the positivity of the associated Choi matrix, where , where |0⟩ and |1⟩ are eigenstates of σ 3 with eigenvalues ±1.Then, Λ t is CP iff X t ≥ 0 [22].From (10), the positivity of the Choi matrix corresponds to If ω ≥ 0, then the right-hand side of the second inequality above is always less than or equal to 2 and CP is guaranteed.Instead, for ω < 0, the expansion of both sides for t → 0 shows that (11) is violated when λ < |ω|.However, at fixed |ω|, for λ sufficiently large, complete positivity is restored, as can be seen by studying the behavior of both sides of inequality (11).
In [12], the following result was proved: it regards the case of two parties of the same type S, both dynamically evolving independently under the same dynamics {Λ t } t≥0 .
This result, which can be obtained as a corollary of Proposition 4 below (see Remark 3), extends to explicitly time-dependent generators L t found in the case of semigroups; namely, that the tensor products Λ t ⊗ Λ t , t ≥ 0, where Λ t = e tL , on the states of S + S are positive if and only if Λ t is completely positive [23], a result also obtainable as a corollary of Proposition 4 below, following the argument in Remark 3.
The physical consequences of Proposition 2 are best appreciated within the context where non-Markovianity is identified using the notion of Backflow of Information (BFI).

Non-Markovianity: Backflow of Information
Differently from the RHP criterion, the BLP criterion proposed in [11] relates Markovianity to the behavior under Λ t of the distinguishability of any two states ρ and σ of the open quantum system S, measured via with ∥ • ∥ 1 being the trace norm.A revival in the time of the distinguishability of two states has been interpreted in [11] as BFI from the environment at the roots of dissipative dynamics into the open quantum system and used to identify a lack of Markovian behavior.
Remark 1.The BLP criterion for Markovianity is based on P-divisibility and is not equivalent to the CP-divisibility criterion.Indeed, maps which are P-divisible but not CPdivisible do not display Backflow of Information (a typical example being the "eternally" non-Markovian evolution first proposed in [26]).On the contrary, CP-divisible maps cannot show Backflow of Information, for they are P-divisible.
In [27], the concepts of CP-divisibility and Backflow of Information were reconciled by coupling the system S to an inert ancilla A of the same dimension and studying the information flow under the dynamics Λ t ⊗ id d of the compound S + A evolution.It was shown that an invertible dynamics {Λ t } t≥0 is CP-divisible if and only if for all µ ∈ [0, 1] and all ρ, σ ∈ S(S + A).
For invertible maps, Proposition 2 implies that the absence of BFI for bipartite systems of identically evolving parties enforces the CP-divisibility of Λ t .
Proposition (3) and Corollary (1) moreover imply that where the notation µ indicates a Helstrom matrix in M d (C).We refer to (15) as the Superactivation of Backflow of Information (SBFI).
Remark 2. As already illustrated in the Introduction, such a phenomenon means that in order to have BFI in a tensor product dynamics of a bipartite quantum system it is not necessary to have it in one or the other of the two parties.As such, it reminds us of the Capacity Superactivation [13,14] in that one can send information through the tensor product of two quantum communication channels that by themselves cannot transmit any information.In the same vein, we shall show below instances of the tensor products of two dynamics not exhibiting BFI that show it (as will be the case, for example, in Section 3, for the mixtures of pure dephasing qubit dynamics and their tensor products).

General Tensor Families
Let us now consider the case of the general families of tensor product maps Λ (1) t ; namely, the two parties need not evolve in time according to the same reduced dynamics.In the semigroup case, it turns out that the maps Λ (1) t can be positive without both single-system maps being completely positive [28].We shall see that, unlike for equal dynamics, the P-divisibility of Λ (1) The next result, based on [29], deals with necessary conditions for the P-divisibility of Λ (1) where Remark 3. Notice that, by choosing K (2) (t) = 0, one reduces to maps of the form Λ t ⊗ id; then, the above result regards the CP-divisibility of Λ t and makes Proposition 1 a corollary of Proposition 4. Instead, taking V = 1 ∈ M d (C), V becomes the identity matrix in M d 2 −1 (C), and the P-divisibility of Λ (1) It is then Proposition 2 regarding the tensor product Λ t ⊗ Λ t that becomes a corollary of the previous proposition; indeed, (18) reduces to K(t) ≥ 0. This, as already remarked, is equivalent to the CP-divisibility of the dynamics.
On the other hand, if Λ t ⊗ Λ t is not P-divisible, one could restore P-divisibility by suitably changing the time-dependent Kossakowski matrix of the second-party dynamics, namely, by choosing K ε (t) = K(t)+εΓ(t).Then, (18) is not positive semidefinite, then, in order to restore the P-divisibility of the tensor product dynamics, one has to seek a generator of the second-party time-evolution which is sufficiently strong.In practice, this means that to avoid SBFI due to Λ t ⊗ Λ t by changing the dynamics of the second party, one in general needs more than just a small perturbation of the second-party generator.
Proof of Proposition 4 .By Lemma 1, the intermediate map and their conjugates, where () T denotes matrix transposition.Then, (19) can be rewritten as (20) Let W be a generic traceless matrix in M d (C).Since every matrix is similar to its transposed matrix, given any invertible V ∈ M d (C), there exists an invertible S such that Finally, since W is a generic traceless d×d matrix, the vector |w⟩ = d 2 −1 i=1 w i |i⟩ consisting of the components of W with respect to the chosen Hilbert-Schmidt orthonormal basis Therefore, the previous inequality yields: We now look for a sufficient condition for the P-divisibility of generic tensor product dynamics Λ (1) t .From (16), without loss of generality [26], the generators of the local maps can be recast in a diagonal form with respect to a time-dependent family of Hilbert-Schmidt operators F (α) k (t), α = 1, 2; furthermore, in the following Proposition, we will restrict to the case of an Hermitian Hilbert-Schmidt orthonormal basis Remark 4. As already remarked in the course of the proof of the previous proposition, only the terms diagonal with respect to a Hilbert-Schmidt basis of traceless and Hermitian operators . Suppose that the rates γ (1,2) k (t) are all positive semidefinite functions of time, except for at most two γ i (t) and γ (2) j (t), and that, for all t ≥ 0, γ for all t ≥ 0 and all k = 1, . . ., d 2 − 1, then Λ (1) The proof is reported in Appendix A. The above assumptions in Proposition 5 are such that, while one rate for one system and one for the other are allowed to become negative, all sums of pairs of rates of either systems are instead forbidden to do so.In order to better illustrate the assumed properties of the rates, let us consider the following example.

Example 2. Let Λ
(1,2) t be Pauli maps as in Example 1 defined by master equations with rates γ (1) and a suitable λ to ensure CP of Λ (see Example 1).Both dynamics are P-divisible; indeed, γ Their tensor product, Λ t , is P-divisible if and only if both Λ (1,2) t are P-divisible and γ (1) The proof is reported in Appendix A. We summarize the divisibility properties of Pauli dynamics and the corresponding conditions on its generator in Table 1.
Table 1: Divisibility properties of Pauli maps: necessary and sufficient conditions.
i (t) + γ (2) It is worth stressing the difference between the time-dependent case and the timeindependent regime; in the latter case, CP-and P-divisibility are equivalent to the complete positivity, respectively, and the positivity of Pauli maps with rates γ (α) k constant in time.In such a case, it cannot be that both maps are positive but not completely positive; indeed, if it were so, there surely exist two negative rates, say, γ (1) i and γ (2) j .Then, their sum is also negative, contradicting Equation (26).As seen in Example 2, in the time-dependent case, both rates ± sin(t) can change sign without spoiling the P-divisibility of the tensor product.
Remark 5.If Λ t is P-divisible but not CP-divisible, one can imagine keeping one party's evolution fixed and varying the second party sufficiently to achieve a Λ t ⊗ Λ t that is Pdivisible, thereby eliminating SBFI through this variation in one of the local environments (for Pauli dynamics, this would mean varying the second-party rates until the conditions in (26) are matched).However, the map Λ t ⊗ Λ t cannot be CP-divisible (since Λ t is not).Corollary 1 then implies that one can recover SBFI by doubling the system to a four-party dynamics (Λ t ⊗ Λ t ) ⊗ (Λ t ⊗ Λ t ) that would not then be P-divisible.

Mixtures of Pure Dephasing Processes: Two-Qubit Divisibility Diagram
To further illustrate the results of the previous sections, we shall now study the divisibility properties of a class of maps obtained via convex mixtures of CP-divisible dynamics in relation to variations in their time-local generators.The main goal is the characterization of a "divisibility diagram" of the tensor products of such mixtures.In particular, we are interested in mixtures of pure qubit dephasing semigroups of completely positive and trace-preserving (CPTP) maps Φ The latter are Pauli maps as in Example 1: Given weights p k ≥ 0, 3 k=1 p k = 1, one then defines their mixtures These convex combinations are also CPTP maps and satisfy µ σ µ , where never vanish.The dynamics is thus invertible, where the time-dependent rates γ p k (t) are related to the weights p = (p 1 , p 2 , p 3 ) in the following way: with . (31c)

One-Qubit Divisibility Diagram
Before considering the tensor products of pairs of the above maps (28), we briefly review some relevant properties for the one-qubit case, which was studied in detail in [30].
(i) P-divisibility.As one can easily check from (30), as well as for cyclic permutations of the indices.Thus (see Example 1), Φ p t is P-divisible for all p.
(ii) Eternal and quasi-eternal non-Markovianity.From ( 30), one has for instance, letting p 3 = 0 =⇒ p 1 + p 2 = 1 and t > 0, , as a consequence of Property (i).Such a dynamics is clearly not CP-divisible and is usually labeled as eternally non-Markovian (ENM).For instance, choosing p 1 = p 2 = 1/2, p 3 = 0, we end up with the ENM evolution first introduced in [26], with γ 1 (t) = γ 2 (t) = 1 and γ 3 (t) = − tanh(t).Similarly, if p 1 p 2 p 3 > 0 and  32).(iii) One-qubit divisibility diagram.The above properties allow one to characterize the one-qubit "divisibility diagram" [31] of the mixtures Φ p t in terms of the parameters p.Let us denote by P the set of weights {p : p k ≥ 0, k p k = 1}.As remarked in point (i) above, each p ∈ P corresponds to a P-divisible map Φ p t .Therefore, the set of divisible maps is the union of the disjoint subsets namely, of the subsets of weights corresponding to CP-divisible maps, respectively, and to P-divisible but not CP-divisible maps Φ p t , respectively.The subset CP can be identified by means of Property (ii); indeed, if Φ p t is not CP-divisible, there must exist exactly one k ∈ {1, 2, 3} such that γ p k (t → ∞) < 0. On the other hand, Φ p t ∈ CP if and only if it has positive rates, so that: Assuming p 1 p 2 p 3 > 0, the asymptotic behavior of the rates for t → ∞ is as follows: makes the region CP identified using the following inequalities where p 3 = 1 − p 1 − p 2 was used, making it possible to represent CP as a twodimensional, triangular-like region in the (p 1 , p 2 ) plane, as in Figure 1.Conversely, maps which are only P-divisible are identified with points p ∈ P \ CP that violate one and only one of the inequalities (39).Such maps are all examples of so-called weakly non-Markovian evolutions: in fact, as stated in Proposition 3, they do not display BFI.The situation is remarkably different when taking the tensor product of two such maps: in such a case, parameter regions with associated BFI appear.

Divisibility Diagram of Tensor Product Dynamics
We now investigate the structure of the divisibility diagram for tensor products Φ p t ⊗ Φ q t .It will become evident that there exist regions CP 2 of CP-divisible maps and N 2 of non-P-divisible maps that exhibit SBFI.However, the two-qubit parameter space will also be complemented by a non-trivial region (P \ CP) 2 of only P-divisible maps that do not show SBFI, as we shall prove in the following.
On the other hand, if (p, q) ∈ CP 2 , consider arbitrary rank-1 projectors (superscripts denote only to which qubits the 4 × 4 matrices refer) showing that Φ q t,s has to be completely positive.The same holds for Φ p t,s , so that p, q ∈ CP ⇐= (p, q) ∈ CP 2 .
• Lack of P-divisibility.In view of Proposition 2, Also, as we have seen, all single-dynamical maps labeled by p are P-divisible; thus, if Φ p t ⊗ Φ p t is not P-divisible, Φ p t cannot be CP-divisible, and then Furthermore, for a sufficiently small but not vanishing perturbation δp, ∥δp∥ ≪ 1, one also has Indeed, a small perturbation cannot in general restore the P-divisibility of the tensor product (see Remark 3).Moreover, we can also assert that Indeed, if both p and q are in P \ CP, then two rates, say, γ p i (t) and γ q j (t), would become negative and stay negative asymptotically: γ p i (∞), γ q j (∞) < 0, by Property (ii).In particular, so will their sum, γ p i (∞) + γ q j (∞) < 0. Thus, Φ p t ⊗ Φ q t cannot be P-divisible, due to Proposition 6.As a consequence, all p, q ∈ P \ CP will give rise to a tensor product map Φ p t ⊗ Φ q t displaying SBFI.
• P-divisibility without CP-divisibility.We now prove the existence of a non-trivial region (P \ CP) 2 of maps Φ p t ⊗ Φ q t which are P-divisible, without Φ p t , Φ q t being both CP-divisible.From (41), such a region can only consist of points (p, q) with p ∈ P \ CP and q ∈ CP or p ∈ CP and q ∈ P \ CP.In order to show that the region (P \ CP) 2 is not empty, we restrict to p of the form (p, p, 1 − 2 p), 0 ≤ p ≤ 1 2 .These are the points lying along the line p 1 = p 2 in Figure 1.With this choice, the Pauli rates become Thus, only γ p 3 (t) might become negative.If γ p 3 (t) ≥ 0, then the inequality (39c) must be satisfied.For p 1 = p 2 = p, it reads 2 p (p 2 − 3p + 1) ≥ 0 .
Then, p = (p, p, 1−2p) ∈ CP if and only if 0 ≤ p ≤ p * , with p * = 1 2 3 − √ 5 ≈ 0.38.Conversely, for p * < p ≤ 1 2 , γ p 3 (t) is not a positive function of time and Φ p t is not CP-divisible.Setting p * < p ≤ 1 2 so that p = (p, p, 1 − 2p) ∈ P \ CP, we then look for parameters q ∈ CP such that Φ p t ⊗ Φ q t is P-divisible.From Proposition 6, necessary and sufficient conditions are First, let us look for a q on the line q 1 = q 2 ≡ q, with 0 ≤ q ≤ p * .Then, a simpler condition can be inferred, namely, Indeed, γ q 3 (t) + γ q k (t) can have at most one zero for t ≥ 0 (see Appendix B).In turn, the following holds: so that one can look only at the asymptotic behavior.Then, (44) enforces the following conditions on the pair (p, q): Hence, if p = (p, p, 1 − 2p) ∈ P \ CP and q = (q, q, 1 − 2q) ∈ CP satisfy (46a) and (46b), then (p, q) ∈ (P \ CP) 2 ; otherwise, they belong to N 2 .Regions defined by (46a) and (46b) are displayed in Figure 2: it shows that, for values of p increasingly greater than p * , the following are true: 1.The largest value 0 ≤ q ≤ p * such that Φ p t ⊗ Φ q t is P-divisible is increasingly smaller than p * (and p).Thus, what also increases is the minimal departure δq = ∥q − p∥ of q from p in the second party such that Φ p t ⊗ Φ p+δq t is P-divisible; 2. The subset of 0 ≤ q ≤ p * such that Φ p t ⊗ Φ q t is P-divisible progressively reduces, up to p = √ 2 − 1 ≈ 0.414, for which only q = 1 3 can make Φ p t ⊗ Φ q t P-divisible (that is, the only q making the map P-divisible is the centroid of CP).
survives the limit t → ∞.Points q within the asymptotic region (P \ CP) p 2,∞ ⊆ CP will give rise to maps Φ p t ⊗ Φ q t , which are P-divisible.Numerical evidence indeed shows that (44) is still necessary and sufficient for having the P-divisibility of the tensor product, since the sum γ p 3 (t) + γ q k (t) will have at most one zero if q ∈ CP (this can be checked by studying the numerator of γ p 3 (t) + γ q k (t), which will be a polynomial in e 2t , and studying the pattern of coefficients to apply the Descartes rule of signs.This is carried out explicitly in Appendix B for the case of p, q taken along the lines p 1 = p 2 and q 1 = q 2 ).
In addition, for p along the line p 1 = p 2 and progressively further away from (p * , p * , 1 − 2p * ), the size of (P \ CP) p 2,∞ ⊆ CP will reduce, as already noted for the q 1 = q 2 case.The regions (P \CP) p 2,∞ for p = (0.4,0.4, 0.2) and p = (0.41, 0.41, 0.18) are compared in Figure 3b.Remark 6.Having fixed p ∈ (P \ CP), the P-divisibility of Φ p t ⊗ Φ q t cannot be restored by making arbitrarily small perturbations to p, as discussed in Remark 3.This is evident also from Figures 2 and 3b, since it is necessary to perform a large enough variation in the second party to enter region (P \ CP) p 2,∞ , restore P-divisibility and, consequently, eliminate SBFI.
t) + γ q k (t) ≥ 0, k = 1, 2, 3} is displayed for t = 1.5 and for t → ∞.In (b), the same region (P \ CP) p 2,∞ is displayed in purple within CP; it contains points q such that Φ p t ⊗ Φ q t is P-divisible.Notice that it cannot be reached from p with an arbitrarily small perturbation p + δp: a large enough variation is required to enter it, restore P-divisibility and eliminate SBFI.The same region is also displayed in dark purple for p = (0.41, 0.41, 0.18), illustrating that as p = (p, p, 1 − 2p) moves along the p 1 = p 2 line with p increasingly larger than p * , the size of the region (P \ CP) p 2,∞ decreases.

Conclusions
This paper deals with a peculiar quantum phenomenon arising within the scenario of open multi-partite quantum systems whose joint dynamics is the tensor product of dynamical maps with time-dependent generators.It might indeed happen that memory effects in single dynamics do not support BFI from environment to system, while the tensor product dynamics do.Such a superactivation phenomenon is a purely quantum effect resulting from non-classical correlations among the parties, as can be shown by means of a suitable collisional model [15].Its physical appeal relies upon the fact that memory effects have often been proven resourceful in a variety of quantum technological tasks.In this respect, further investigations are needed for potential applications of SBFI.
The absence or presence of BFI in connection to an open quantum dynamics Λ t is determined using its divisibility properties, namely, by whether or not the intertwining maps Λ t,s such that Λ t = Λ t,s • Λ s are positive or not.We investigated such properties for the general tensor products of completely positive dynamical maps Λ (1) t , with the aim of seeking conditions for P-divisibility, without the single-party maps Λ (1,2) t being CP-divisible, namely, without these maps having completely positive intertwiners.
For the case of two P-divisible Pauli maps acting on qubits, particularly simple necessary and sufficient conditions for the P-divisibility of their tensor products have been given in terms of the mutual sums of the master equation rates.Moreover, examples have been provided in which the P-divisibility of the tensor product could be achieved without one or even both maps being CP-divisible.The interest of these results relates to the fact that a lack of P-divisibility (along with invertibility) implies the emergence of BFI through revivals of the trace distance between time-evolving quantum states.If Λ t is P-but not CP-divisible, it is known that BFI does not occur for Λ t , but it does occur for the second-order tensor product Λ t ⊗ Λ t , describing two parties evolving in identical, dissipative environments.Such an intriguing phenomenon has been called the Superactivation of BFI.
The results presented in the manuscript imply that SBFI can be switched off by performing a suitable variation of one of the two dissipative evolutions.Concretely, by suitably changing the parameters of the generator of one of the parties, for instance, by acting on the microscopic origin of open quantum dynamics, one can stop information from being injected into the coupled open quantum system from the environment.Abundant phenomenology relative to the SBFI effect has been provided by means of mixtures of dephasing qubit maps, in particular by means of two-qubit "divisibility diagrams" that show regions of CP-divisible maps, of non-P-divisible maps as well as of only P-divisible maps.The emerging picture is such that, when dealing with P-divisible but not CPdivisible dynamics Λ t , obtaining a P-divisible tensor product Λ t ⊗ Λ t is not achievable via simple tensorization with a slight perturbation Λ t of Λ t itself; instead, a sufficiently large variation is required to eliminate SBFI.   the number of sign changes between its nonzero coefficients ordered in descending order of the powers, and m ∈ N. In particular, if the number of sign changes is S = 1 or S = 0, there are, respectively, one or zero roots), γ p 3 (t) will have only one zero when α 3,2 (p) turns negative.Points p for which α 3,2 (p) turn negative are shown in Figure 4a.

Proposition 5 .
the time-local generators(16) non-trivially contribute to G s (ϕ, ψ), for orthogonal |ϕ⟩ , |ψ⟩, as one sees from(20) in the proof of Proposition 4. The commutator and anti-commutator terms do not play any role.Therefore, focusing on only the dissipative part of the generator as in the subsequent proposition is no restriction.Let the generators of Λ

Figure 3 :
Figure 3: In (a), for fixed p = (0.4,0.4, 0.2) in (P \ CP), the region (P \ CP) p 2,t = {q ∈ CP : γ p 3 (t) + γ q k (t) ≥ 0, k = 1, 2, 3} is displayed for t = 1.5 and for t → ∞.In (b), the same region (P \ CP) p 2,∞ is displayed in purple within CP; it contains points q such that Φ p t ⊗ Φ q t is P-divisible.Notice that it cannot be reached from p with an arbitrarily small perturbation p + δp: a large enough variation is required to enter it, restore P-divisibility and eliminate SBFI.The same region is also displayed in dark purple for p = (0.41, 0.41, 0.18), illustrating that as p = (p, p, 1 − 2p) moves along the p 1 = p 2 line with p increasingly larger than p * , the size of the region (P \ CP) p 2,∞ decreases.