4.2 Article

Inferring work by quantum superposing forward and time-reversal evolutions

Journal

PHYSICAL REVIEW RESEARCH
Volume 4, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevResearch.4.013208

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. Royal Society through Newton International Fellowship [NIF\R1\202512]
  2. Spanish MICINN through the Juan de la Cierva program [IJC2019-039592-I]
  3. European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation pro-gram under Marie Skodowska-Curie Grant [801110]
  4. Austrian Federal Ministry of Education, Sci-ence and Research (BMBWF)
  5. Austrian Science Fund (FWF) through Be-yondC [F7113]
  6. European Commis-sion through EPIQUS [899368]
  7. Austrian Science Fund via GRIPS [P30817-N36]
  8. Spanish Government [FIS-2017-83706-R]
  9. Austrian Science Fund (FWF) through the SFB project BeyondC [F7103]
  10. Foundational Questions Institute (FQXi) Fund
  11. European Commission via Testing the Large-Scale Limit of Quantum Mechanics (TEQ) [766900]
  12. John Templeton Foundation [61466, 59]
  13. research platform TURIS

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The study of thermodynamic fluctuations allows for the relationship between the free energy difference between two equilibrium states and the work done on a system in non-equilibrium conditions. A new interferometric method is developed to estimate the work distribution and average dissipative work during a driven thermodynamic process by combining the forward and time-reversal evolutions of the process. This method provides upper bounds on the average dissipative work even without full control over the thermodynamic process.
The study of thermodynamic fluctuations allows one to relate the free energy difference between two equilibrium states with the work done on a system through processes far from equilibrium. This finding plays a crucial role in the quantum regime, where the definition of work becomes nontrivial. Based on these relations, here we develop a simple interferometric method allowing a direct estimation of the work distribution and the average dissipative work during a driven thermodynamic process by superposing the forward and time-reversal evolutions of the process. We show that our scheme provides useful upper bounds on the average dissipative work even without full control over the thermodynamic process, and we propose methodological variations depending on the possible experimental limitations encountered. Finally, we exemplify its applicability by an experimental proposal for implementing our method on a quantum photonics system, on which the thermodynamic process is performed through polarization rotations induced by liquid crystals acting in a discrete temporal regime.

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