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Dive into the research topics where Nicole Yunger Halpern is active.

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Featured researches published by Nicole Yunger Halpern.


Physics Reports | 2015

The resource theory of informational nonequilibrium in thermodynamics

Gilad Gour; Markus Müller; Varun Narasimhachar; Robert W. Spekkens; Nicole Yunger Halpern

We review recent work on the foundations of thermodynamics in the light of quantum information theory. We adopt a resource-theoretic perspective, wherein thermodynamics is formulated as a theory of what agents can achieve under a particular restriction, namely, that the only state preparations and transformations that they can implement for free are those that are thermal at some fixed temperature. States that are out of thermal equilibrium are the resources. We consider the special case of this theory wherein all systems have trivial Hamiltonians (that is, all of their energy levels are degenerate). In this case, the only free operations are those that add noise to the system (or implement a reversible evolution) and the only nonequilibrium states are states of informational nonequilibrium, that is, states that deviate from the maximally mixed state. The degree of this deviation we call the state’s nonuniformity; it is the resource of interest here, the fuel that is consumed, for instance, in an erasure operation. We consider the different types of state conversion: exact and approximate, single-shot and asymptotic, catalytic and noncatalytic. In each case, we present the necessary and sufficient conditions for the conversion to be possible for any pair of states, emphasizing a geometrical representation of the conditions in terms of Lorenz curves. We also review the problem of quantifying the nonuniformity of a state, in particular through the use of generalized entropies, and that of quantifying the gap between the nonuniformity one must expend to achieve a single-shot state preparation or state conversion and the nonuniformity one can extract in the reverse operation. Quantum state-conversion problems in this resource theory can be shown to be always reducible to their classical counterparts, so that there are no inherently quantum-mechanical features arising in such problems. This body of work also demonstrates that the standard formulation of the second law of thermodynamics is inadequate as a criterion for deciding whether or not a given state transition is possible.


Physical Review A | 2017

Jarzynski-like equality for the out-of-time-ordered correlator

Nicole Yunger Halpern

The out-of-time-ordered correlator (OTOC) diagnoses quantum chaos and the scrambling of quantum information via the spread of entanglement. The OTOC encodes forward and reverse evolutions and has deep connections with the flow of time. So do fluctuation relations such as Jarzynskis equality, derived in nonequilibrium statistical mechanics. I unite these two powerful, seemingly disparate tools by deriving a Jarzynski-like equality for the OTOC. The equalitys left-hand side equals the OTOC. The right-hand side suggests a protocol for measuring the OTOC indirectly. The protocol is platform-nonspecific and can be performed with weak measurement or with interference. Time evolution need not be reversed in any interference trial. The equality enables fluctuation relations to provide insights into holography, condensed matter, and quantum information and vice versa.


Nature Communications | 2016

Microcanonical and resource-theoretic derivations of the thermal state of a quantum system with noncommuting charges

Nicole Yunger Halpern; Philippe Faist; Jonathan Oppenheim; Andreas Winter

The grand canonical ensemble lies at the core of quantum and classical statistical mechanics. A small system thermalizes to this ensemble while exchanging heat and particles with a bath. A quantum system may exchange quantities represented by operators that fail to commute. Whether such a system thermalizes and what form the thermal state has are questions about truly quantum thermodynamics. Here we investigate this thermal state from three perspectives. First, we introduce an approximate microcanonical ensemble. If this ensemble characterizes the system-and-bath composite, tracing out the bath yields the systems thermal state. This state is expected to be the equilibrium point, we argue, of typical dynamics. Finally, we define a resource-theory model for thermodynamic exchanges of noncommuting observables. Complete passivity—the inability to extract work from equilibrium states—implies the thermal states form, too. Our work opens new avenues into equilibrium in the presence of quantum noncommutation.


Physical Review A | 2018

Quasiprobability behind the out-of-time-ordered correlator

Nicole Yunger Halpern; Brian Swingle; Justin Dressel

Two topics, evolving rapidly in separate fields, were combined recently: the out-of-time-ordered correlator (OTOC) signals quantum-information scrambling in many-body systems. The Kirkwood-Dirac (KD) quasiprobability represents operators in quantum optics. The OTOC was shown to equal a moment of a summed quasiprobability [Yunger Halpern, Phys. Rev. A 95, 012120 (2017)]. That quasiprobability, we argue, is an extension of the KD distribution. We explore the quasiprobabilitys structure from experimental, numerical, and theoretical perspectives. First, we simplify and analyze Yunger Halperns weak-measurement and interference protocols for measuring the OTOC and its quasiprobability. We decrease, exponentially in system size, the number of trials required to infer the OTOC from weak measurements. We also construct a circuit for implementing the weak-measurement scheme. Next, we calculate the quasiprobability (after coarse graining) numerically and analytically: we simulate a transverse-field Ising model first. Then, we calculate the quasiprobability averaged over random circuits, which model chaotic dynamics. The quasiprobability, we find, distinguishes chaotic from integrable regimes. We observe nonclassical behaviors: the quasiprobability typically has negative components. It becomes nonreal in some regimes. The onset of scrambling breaks a symmetry that bifurcates the quasiprobability, as in classical-chaos pitchforks. Finally, we present mathematical properties. We define an extended KD quasiprobability that generalizes the KD distribution. The quasiprobability obeys a Bayes-type theorem, for example, that exponentially decreases the memory required to calculate weak values, in certain cases. A time-ordered correlator analogous to the OTOC, insensitive to quantum-information scrambling, depends on a quasiprobability closer to a classical probability. This work not only illuminates the OTOCs underpinnings, but also generalizes quasiprobability theory and motivates immediate-future weak-measurement challenges.


Physical Review A | 2017

Quantum voting and violation of Arrow's Impossibility Theorem

Ning Bao; Nicole Yunger Halpern

We propose a quantum voting system in the spirit of quantum games such as the quantum prisoners dilemma. Our scheme enables a constitution to violate a quantum analog of Arrows impossibility theorem. Arrows theorem is a claim proved deductively in economics: Every (classical) constitution endowed with three innocuous-seeming properties is a dictatorship. We construct quantum analogs of constitutions, of the properties, and of Arrows theorem. A quantum version of majority rule, we show, violates this quantum Arrow conjecture. Our voting system allows for tactical-voting strategies reliant on entanglement, interference, and superpositions. This contribution to quantum game theory helps elucidate how quantum phenomena can be harnessed for strategic advantage.


arXiv: Quantum Physics | 2017

Toward physical realizations of thermodynamic resource theories

Nicole Yunger Halpern

“This is your arch-nemesis.” The thank-you slide of my resentation remained onscreen, and the question-and-answer session had begun.


Physical Review A | 2018

Strengthening weak measurements of qubit out-of-time-order correlators

Justin Dressel; Jose Raul Gonzalez Alonso; Mordecai Waegell; Nicole Yunger Halpern

For systems of controllable qubits, we provide a method for experimentally obtaining a useful class of multitime correlators using sequential generalized measurements of arbitrary strength. Specifically, if a correlator can be expressed as an average of nested (anti)commutators of operators that square to the identity, then that correlator can be determined exactly from the average of a measurement sequence. As a relevant example, we provide quantum circuits for measuring multiqubit out-of-time-order correlators using optimized control-Z or ZX-90 two-qubit gates common in superconducting transmon implementations.


Physical Review E | 2016

Beyond heat baths: Generalized resource theories for small-scale thermodynamics.

Nicole Yunger Halpern; Joseph M. Renes


New Journal of Physics | 2015

Introducing one-shot work into fluctuation relations

Nicole Yunger Halpern; Andrew J. P. Garner; Oscar C. O. Dahlsten; Vlatko Vedral


arXiv: Statistical Mechanics | 2014

Unification of fluctuation theorems and one-shot statistical mechanics

Nicole Yunger Halpern; Andrew J. P. Garner; Oscar C. O. Dahlsten; Vlatko Vedral

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Andrew J. P. Garner

National University of Singapore

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Justin Dressel

University of California

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Gil Refael

California Institute of Technology

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Jose Raul Gonzalez Alonso

University of Southern California

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Daniel Braun

University of Tübingen

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