Exponential improvement for quantum cooling through finite-memory effects
Abstract
Practical implementations of quantum technologies require preparation of states with a high degree of purity---or, in thermodynamic terms, very low temperatures. Given finite resources, the Third Law of thermodynamics prohibits perfect cooling; nonetheless, attainable upper bounds for the asymptotic ground state population of a system repeatedly interacting with quantum thermal machines have been derived. These bounds apply within a memoryless (Markovian) setting, in which each refrigeration step proceeds independently of those previous. Here, we expand this framework to study the effects of memory on quantum cooling. By introducing a memory mechanism through a generalized collision model that permits a Markovian embedding, we derive achievable bounds that provide an exponential advantage over the memoryless case. For qubits, our bound coincides with that of heat-bath algorithmic cooling, which our framework generalizes to arbitrary dimensions. We lastly describe the adaptive step-wise optimal protocol that outperforms all standard procedures.
Cite
@article{arxiv.2004.00323,
title = {Exponential improvement for quantum cooling through finite-memory effects},
author = {Philip Taranto and Faraj Bakhshinezhad and Philipp Schüttelkopf and Fabien Clivaz and Marcus Huber},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2004.00323},
year = {2020}
}
Comments
4.5+13 pages, 9 figures. Close to published version