1,529 research outputs found
Charger-mediated energy transfer in exactly-solvable models for quantum batteries
We present a systematic analysis and classification of several models of
quantum batteries involving different combinations of two level systems and
quantum harmonic oscillators. In particular, we study energy transfer processes
from a given quantum system, termed charger, to another one, i.e. the proper
battery. In this setting, we analyze different figures of merit, including the
charging time, the maximum energy transfer, and the average charging power. The
role of coupling Hamiltonians which do not preserve the number of local
excitations in the charger-battery system is clarified by properly accounting
them in the global energy balance of the model.Comment: 11 page
Charger-mediated energy transfer for quantum batteries: an open system approach
The energy charging of a quantum battery is analyzed in an open quantum
setting, where the interaction between the battery element and the external
power source is mediated by an ancilla system (the quantum charger) that acts
as a controllable switch. Different implementations are analyzed putting
emphasis on the interplay between coherent energy pumping mechanisms and
thermalization
Quantum bath statistics tagging
The possibility of discriminating the statistics of a thermal bath using
indirect measurements performed on quantum probes is presented. The scheme
relies on the fact that, when weakly coupled with the environment of interest,
the transient evolution of the probe toward its final thermal configuration, is
strongly affected by the fermionic or bosonic nature of the bath excitations.
Using figures of merit taken from quantum metrology such as the Holevo-Helstrom
probability of error and the Quantum Chernoff bound, we discuss how to achieve
the greatest precision in this statistics tagging procedure, analyzing
different models of probes and different initial preparations and by optimizing
over the time of exposure of the probe
Recovering complete positivity of non-Markovian quantum dynamics with Choi-proximity regularization
A relevant problem in the theory of open quantum systems is the lack of
complete positivity of dynamical maps obtained after weak-coupling
approximations, a famous example being the Redfield master equation. A number
of approaches exist to recover well-defined evolutions under additional
Markovian assumptions, but much less is known beyond this regime. Here we
propose a numerical method to cure the complete-positivity violation issue
while preserving the non-Markovian features of an arbitrary original dynamical
map. The idea is to replace its unphysical Choi operator with its closest
physical one, mimicking recent work on quantum process tomography. We also show
that the regularized dynamics is more accurate in terms of reproducing the
exact dynamics: this allows to heuristically push the utilization of these
master equations in moderate coupling regimes, where the loss of positivity can
have relevant impact.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figure
Going beyond Local and Global approaches for localized thermal dissipation
Identifying which master equation is preferable for the description of a
multipartite open quantum system is not trivial and has led in the recent years
to the local vs. global debate in the context of Markovian dissipation. We
treat here a paradigmatic scenario in which the system is composed of two
interacting harmonic oscillators A and B, with only A interacting with a
thermal bath - collection of other harmonic oscillators - and we study the
equilibration process of the system initially in the ground state with the bath
finite temperature. We show that the completely positive version of the
Redfield equation obtained using coarse-grain and an appropriate time-dependent
convex mixture of the local and global solutions give rise to the most accurate
semigroup approximations of the whole exact system dynamics, i.e. both at short
and at long time scales, outperforming the local and global approaches
Extended local ergotropy
A fundamental problem in quantum thermodynamics is to properly quantify the
work extractable from out-of-equilibrium systems. While for closed systems,
maximum quantum work extraction is defined in terms of the ergotropy
functional, this question is unclear in open systems interacting with an
environment. The concept of local ergotropy has been proposed, but it presents
several problems, such as it is not guaranteed to be non-increasing in time.
Here we introduce the concept of extended local ergotropy by exploiting the
free evolution of the system-environment compound. At variance with the local
ergotropy, the extended local ergotropy is greater, is non-increasing in time,
and activates the potential of work extraction in many cases. We then
concentrate on specific schemes in which we alternate repeated local unitaries
and free system-environment evolution. We provide examples based on the
Jaynes-Cummings model, presenting practical protocols and analytic results that
serve as proof of principle for the aforementioned advantages.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures + supplemental material. Comments welcom
Patterns of CT lung injury and toxicity after stereotactic radiotherapy delivered with helical tomotherapy in early stage medically inoperable NSCLC
To evaluate toxicity and patterns of radiologic lung injury on CT images after hypofractionated image-guided stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT) delivered with helical tomotherapy (HT) in medically early stage inoperable non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC)
Introducing Collaboration in Single-user Applications through the Centralized Control Architecture
In this paper we describe a novel Model-View Controller based architecture, Centralized Control, that introduces collaboration in single-users applications. The architecture is able to add collaboration with no need to modify the source code of the original single-user application, and providing also the capability to introduce group semantics into the new, collaborative application that is obtained. The architecture is shown in practice, by introducing CollabXMind, a collaborative mind
map tool, that is based on a well-known single-user tool, XMind
Discrimination of thermal baths by single qubit probes
Non-equilibrium states of quantum systems in contact with thermal baths help
telling environments with different temperatures or different statistics apart.
We extend these studies to a more generic problem that consists in
discriminating between two baths with disparate constituents at unequal
temperatures. Notably there exist temperature regimes in which the presence of
coherence in the initial state preparation is beneficial for the discrimination
capability. We also find that non-equilibrium states are not universally
optimal, and detail the conditions in which it becomes convenient to wait for
complete thermalisation of the probe. These concepts are illustrated in a
linear optical simulation.Comment: Few typos corrected, bibliography expande
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