Dissipative dynamics of an open quantum battery in the BTZ spacetime
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2409.09259v3
- Date: Mon, 23 Sep 2024 13:21:15 GMT
- Title: Dissipative dynamics of an open quantum battery in the BTZ spacetime
- Authors: Zehua Tian, Xiaobao Liu, Jieci Wang, Jiliang Jing,
- Abstract summary: We consider how charging performances of a quantum battery are influenced by the presence of vacuum fluctuations of a quantum field.
Different boundary conditions for quantum field may lead to different charging performance.
Our study presents a general framework to investigate relaxation effects in curved spacetime.
- Score: 0.0
- License: http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/
- Abstract: We consider how charging performances of a quantum battery, modeled as a two-level system, are influenced by the presence of vacuum fluctuations of a quantum field satisfying the Dirichlet, transparent, and Neumann boundary conditions in the BTZ spacetime. The quantum battery is subjected to an external static driving which works as a charger. Meanwhile, the quantum field is assumed to be coupled to both longitudinal and transverse spin components of the quantum battery including decoherence and pure dephasing mechanisms. Charging and discharging dynamics of the quantum battery are derived by extending the previous open quantum system approach in the relativistic framework to this more general scenario including both the driving and multiple coupling. Analytic expressions for the time evolution of the energy stored are presented. We find that when the driving amplitude is stronger/weaker than the energy-level spacing of the quantum battery the pure dephasing dissipative coupling results in better/worse charging performances than the decoherence dissipative coupling case. We also find that higher Hawking temperature helps to improve the charging performance under certain conditions compared with the closed quantum buttery case, implying the feasibility of energy extraction from vacuum fluctuations in curved spacetime via dissipation in charging protocol. Different boundary conditions for quantum field may lead to different charging performance. Furthermore, we also address the charging stability by monitoring the energy behaviour after the charging protocol has been switched off. Our study presents a general framework to investigate relaxation effects in curved spacetime, and reveals how spacetime properties and field boundary condition affect the charging process, which in turn may shed light on the exploration of the spacetime properties and thermodynamics via the charging protocol.
Related papers
- Thermalization and Criticality on an Analog-Digital Quantum Simulator [133.58336306417294]
We present a quantum simulator comprising 69 superconducting qubits which supports both universal quantum gates and high-fidelity analog evolution.
We observe signatures of the classical Kosterlitz-Thouless phase transition, as well as strong deviations from Kibble-Zurek scaling predictions.
We digitally prepare the system in pairwise-entangled dimer states and image the transport of energy and vorticity during thermalization.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2024-05-27T17:40:39Z) - Topological Quantum Batteries [0.3749861135832073]
We propose an innovative design for quantum batteries (QBs) that involves coupling two-level systems to a topological photonic waveguide.
We analytically explore the thermodynamic performances of QBs.
Our findings offer valuable guidance for improving quantum battery performance through structured reservoir engineering.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2024-05-06T17:50:35Z) - Nonreciprocal Quantum Batteries [0.0]
We introduce nonreciprocity through reservoir engineering during the charging process, resulting in a substantial increase in energy accumulation.
Despite local dissipation, the nonreciprocal approach demonstrates a fourfold increase in battery energy.
In a broader context, the concept of nonreciprocal charging has significant implications for sensing, energy capture, and storage technologies.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2024-01-10T11:50:03Z) - Amplification of quantum transfer and quantum ratchet [56.47577824219207]
We study a model of amplification of quantum transfer and making it directed which we call the quantum ratchet model.
The ratchet effect is achieved in the quantum control model with dissipation and sink, where the Hamiltonian depends on vibrations in the energy difference synchronized with transitions between energy levels.
Amplitude and frequency of the oscillating vibron together with the dephasing rate are the parameters of the quantum ratchet which determine its efficiency.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2023-12-31T14:04:43Z) - Real-time dynamics of false vacuum decay [49.1574468325115]
We investigate false vacuum decay of a relativistic scalar field in the metastable minimum of an asymmetric double-well potential.
We employ the non-perturbative framework of the two-particle irreducible (2PI) quantum effective action at next-to-leading order in a large-N expansion.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2023-10-06T12:44:48Z) - Adiabatic Shortcuts Completion in Quantum Field Theory: Annihilation of
Created Particles [44.99833362998488]
We investigate the completion of a nonadiabatic evolution into a shortcut to adiabaticity for a quantum field confined within a one-dimensional cavity containing two movable mirrors.
We achieve a smooth extension of the Moore functions that implements the STA.
We draw attention to the existence of a comparable problem within nonrelativistic quantum mechanics.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2023-08-25T14:19:21Z) - Optimal Quantum Control of Charging Quantum Batteries [0.0]
We develop a convergent iterative method for the control of the population of a bipartite quantum system.
We take into account experimentally viable problem of turning-on and off of the charging external field.
Optimising the shape of the pulse significantly boosts both the power and efficiency of the charging process.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2022-06-30T20:29:39Z) - The quantum Otto cycle in a superconducting cavity in the non-adiabatic
regime [62.997667081978825]
We analyze the efficiency of the quantum Otto cycle applied to a superconducting cavity.
It is shown that, in a non-adiabatic regime, the efficiency of the quantum cycle is affected by the dynamical Casimir effect.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-11-30T11:47:33Z) - Continuous-time dynamics and error scaling of noisy highly-entangling
quantum circuits [58.720142291102135]
We simulate a noisy quantum Fourier transform processor with up to 21 qubits.
We take into account microscopic dissipative processes rather than relying on digital error models.
We show that depending on the dissipative mechanisms at play, the choice of input state has a strong impact on the performance of the quantum algorithm.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-02-08T14:55:44Z) - Dissipative dynamics of an open quantum battery [0.0]
Coupling with an external environment inevitably affects the dynamics of a quantum system.
We consider how charging performances of a quantum battery, modelled as a two level system, are influenced by the presence of an Ohmic thermal reservoir.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2020-05-28T14:11:38Z) - Bounds on charging power of open quantum batteries [0.0]
We study fundamental bounds on the power of open quantum batteries from the geometric point of view.
Our results show that the maximum value of both the stored work and the corresponding power is achieved in the non-Markovian underdamped regime.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2020-03-22T05:33:08Z)
This list is automatically generated from the titles and abstracts of the papers in this site.
This site does not guarantee the quality of this site (including all information) and is not responsible for any consequences.