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Trapped Ion Quantum Computing
Quantum Thermodynamics
A sufficient set of experimentally implementable thermal operations
arXiv
Authors: Chris Perry, Piotr Ćwikliński, Janet Anders, Michał Horodecki, Jonathan Oppenheim
Year
2015
Paper ID
26034
Status
Preprint
Abstract Read
~2 min
Abstract Words
179
Citations
N/A
Abstract
Recent work using tools from quantum information theory has shown that at the nanoscale where quantum effects become prevalent, there is not one thermodynamical second law but many. Derivations of these laws assume that an experimenter has very precise control of the system and heat bath. Here we show that these multitude of laws can be saturated using two very simple operations: changing the energy levels of the system and thermalizing over any two system energy levels. Using these two operations, one can distill the optimal amount of work from a system, as well as perform the reverse formation process. Even more surprisingly, using only these two operations and one ancilla qubit in a thermal state, one can transform any state into any other state allowable by the second laws. We thus have the remarkable result that the second laws hold for fine-grained manipulation of system and bath, but can be achieved using very coarse control. This brings the full array of thermal operations into a regime accessible by experiment, and establishes the physical relevance of these second laws.
Why This Paper Matters
- This paper contributes to the Quantum Thermodynamics research area in the Quantum Articles archive.
- It adds a 2015 reference point for readers tracking recent quantum research.
- Recent work using tools from quantum information theory has shown that at the nanoscale where quantum effects become prevalent, there is not one thermodynamical second law but...
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