John Goold
International Centre for Theoretical Physics
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Publication
Featured researches published by John Goold.
Journal of Physics A | 2016
John Goold; Marcus Huber; Arnau Riera; Lídia del Rio; Paul Skrzypczyk
This topical review article gives an overview of the interplay between quantum information theory and thermodynamics of quantum systems. We focus on several trending topics including the foundations of statistical mechanics, resource theories, entanglement in thermodynamic settings, fluctuation theorems and thermal machines. This is not a comprehensive review of the diverse field of quantum thermodynamics; rather, it is a convenient entry point for the thermo-curious information theorist. Furthermore this review should facilitate the unification and understanding of different interdisciplinary approaches emerging in research groups around the world.
Physical Review Letters | 2014
Tiago B. Batalhão; Alexandre M. Souza; Laura Mazzola; R. Auccaise; R. S. Sarthour; I. S. Oliveira; John Goold; Gabriele De Chiara; Mauro Paternostro; R. M. Serra
We report the experimental reconstruction of the nonequilibrium work probability distribution in a closed quantum system, and the study of the corresponding quantum fluctuation relations. The experiment uses a liquid-state nuclear magnetic resonance platform that offers full control on the preparation and dynamics of the system. Our endeavors enable the characterization of the out-of-equilibrium dynamics of a quantum spin from a finite-time thermodynamics viewpoint.
Physical Review Letters | 2013
Ross Dorner; Stephen Clark; Libby Heaney; Rosario Fazio; John Goold; Vlatko Vedral
We propose an experimental scheme to verify the quantum nonequilibrium fluctuation relations using current technology. Specifically, we show that the characteristic function of the work distribution for a nonequilibrium quench of a general quantum system can be extracted by Ramsey interferometry of a single probe qubit. Our scheme paves the way for the full characterization of nonequilibrium processes in a variety of quantum systems, ranging from single particles to many-body atomic systems and spin chains. We demonstrate our idea using a time-dependent quench of the motional state of a trapped ion, where the internal pseudospin provides a convenient probe qubit.
Scientific Reports | 2015
A. del Campo; John Goold; Mauro Paternostro
The practical untenability of the quasi-static assumption makes any realistic engine intrinsically irreversible and its operating time finite, thus implying friction effects at short cycle times. An important technological goal is thus the design of maximally efficient engines working at the maximum possible power. We show that, by utilising shortcuts to adiabaticity in a quantum engine cycle, one can engineer a thermodynamic cycle working at finite power and zero friction. Our findings are illustrated using a harmonic oscillator undergoing a quantum Otto cycle.
Physical Review Letters | 2012
Ross Dorner; John Goold; Cecilia Cormick; Mauro Paternostro; Vlatko Vedral
We study the statistics of the work done, fluctuation relations, and irreversible entropy production in a quantum many-body system subject to the sudden quench of a control parameter. By treating the quench as a thermodynamic transformation we show that the emergence of irreversibility in the nonequilibrium dynamics of closed many-body quantum systems can be accurately characterized. We demonstrate our ideas by considering a transverse quantum Ising model that is taken out of equilibrium by an instantaneous change of the transverse field.
arXiv: Quantum Physics | 2016
J. P. S. Peterson; R. S. Sarthour; Alexandre M. Souza; I. S. Oliveira; John Goold; Kavan Modi; D. O. Soares-Pinto; Lucas C. Céleri
Landauer’s principle sets fundamental thermodynamical constraints for classical and quantum information processing, thus affecting not only various branches of physics, but also of computer science and engineering. Despite its importance, this principle was only recently experimentally considered for classical systems. Here we employ a nuclear magnetic resonance set-up to experimentally address the information to energy conversion in a quantum system. Specifically, we consider a three nuclear spins S=12 (qubits) molecule—the system, the reservoir and the ancilla—to measure the heat dissipated during the implementation of a global system–reservoir unitary interaction that changes the information content of the system. By employing an interferometric technique, we were able to reconstruct the heat distribution associated with the unitary interaction. Then, through quantum state tomography, we measured the relative change in the entropy of the system. In this way, we were able to verify that an operation that changes the information content of the system must necessarily generate heat in the reservoir, exactly as predicted by Landauer’s principle. The scheme presented here allows for the detailed study of irreversible entropy production in quantum information processors.
Physical Review A | 2012
Pinja Haikka; John Goold; Suzanne McEndoo; Francesco Plastina; Sabrina Maniscalco
INFN–Gruppo Collegato di Cosenza, Italy(Dated: February 15, 2012)A simple relationship between recently proposed measures of non-Markovianity and the Loschmidtecho is established, holding for a two-level system (qubit) undergoing pure dephasing due to acoupling with a many-body environment. We show that the Loschmidt echo is intimately related tothe information flowing out from and occasionally back into the system. This, in turn, determinesthe non-Markovianity of the reduced dynamics. In particular, we consider a central qubit coupledto a quantum Ising ring in the transverse field. In this context, the information flux between systemand environment is strongly affected by the environmental criticality; the qubit dynamics is shownto be Markovian exactly and only at the critical point. Therefore non-Markovianity is an indicatorof criticality in the model considered here.
Physical Review Letters | 2015
John Goold; Mauro Paternostro; Kavan Modi
Using the operational framework of completely positive, trace preserving operations and thermodynamic fluctuation relations, we derive a lower bound for the heat exchange in a Landauer erasure process on a quantum system. Our bound comes from a nonphenomenological derivation of the Landauer principle which holds for generic nonequilibrium dynamics. Furthermore, the bound depends on the nonunitality of dynamics, giving it a physical significance that differs from other derivations. We apply our framework to the model of a spin-1/2 system coupled to an interacting spin chain at finite temperature.
Physical Review E | 2015
Felix C. Binder; Sai Vinjanampathy; Kavan Modi; John Goold
Accurately describing work extraction from a quantum system is a central objective for the extension of thermodynamics to individual quantum systems. The concepts of work and heat are surprisingly subtle when generalizations are made to arbitrary quantum states. We formulate an operational thermodynamics suitable for application to an open quantum system undergoing quantum evolution under a general quantum process by which we mean a completely positive and trace-preserving map. We derive an operational first law of thermodynamics for such processes and show consistency with the second law. We show that heat, from the first law, is positive when the input state of the map majorizes the output state. Moreover, the change in entropy is also positive for the same majorization condition. This makes a strong connection between the two operational laws of thermodynamics.
New Journal of Physics | 2015
Felix C. Binder; Sai Vinjanampathy; Kavan Modi; John Goold
We study the problem of charging a quantum battery in finite time. We demonstrate an analytical optimal protocol for the case of a single qubit. Extending this analysis to an array of N qubits, we demonstrate that an N-fold advantage in power per qubit can be achieved when global operations are permitted. The exemplary analytic argument for this quantum advantage in the charging power is backed up by numerical analysis using optimal control techniques. It is demonstrated that the quantum advantage for power holds when, with cyclic operation in mind, initial and final states are required to be separable.