4 research outputs found

    Non-Markovian control of qubit thermodynamics by frequent quantum measurements

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    We explore the effects of frequent, impulsive quantum nondemolition measurements of the energy of two-level systems (TLS), alias qubits, in contact with a thermal bath. The resulting entropy and temperature of both the system and the bath are found to be completely determined by the measurement rate, and unrelated to what is expected by standard thermodynamical rules that hold for Markovian baths. These anomalies allow for very fast control of heating, cooling and state-purification (entropy reduction) of qubits, much sooner than their thermal equilibration time.Comment: 8 pages, 9 figure

    Teleportation of the one-qubit state with environment-disturbed recovery operations

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    We study standard protocol P0\mathcal{P}_0 for teleporting the one-qubit state with both the transmission process of the two qubits constitute the quantum channel and the recovery operations performed by Bob disturbed by the decohering environment. The results revealed that Bob's imperfect operations do not eliminate the possibility of nonclassical teleportation fidelity provided he shares an ideal channel state with Alice, while the transmission process is constrained by a critical time t0,ct_{0,c} longer than which will result in failure of P0\mathcal{P}_0 if the two qubits are corrupted by the decohering environment. Moreover, we found that under the condition of the same decoherence rate Îł\gamma, the teleportation protocol is significantly more fragile when it is executed under the influence of the noisy environment than those under the influence of the dissipative and dephasing environments.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figure
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