pith. sign in

Quantum refrigeration powered by noise in a superconducting circuit

1 Pith paper cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.

1 Pith paper citing it
abstract

While dephasing noise frequently presents obstacles for quantum devices, it can become an asset in the context of a Brownian-type quantum refrigerator. Here we demonstrate a novel quantum thermal machine that leverages noise-assisted quantum transport to fuel a cooling engine in steady state. The device exploits symmetry-selective couplings between a superconducting artificial molecule and two microwave waveguides. These waveguides act as thermal reservoirs of different temperatures, which we regulate by employing synthesized thermal fields. We inject dephasing noise through a third channel that is longitudinally coupled to an artificial atom of the molecule. By varying the relative temperatures of the reservoirs, and measuring heat currents with a resolution below 1 aW, we demonstrate that the device can be operated as a quantum heat engine, thermal accelerator, and refrigerator. Our findings open new avenues for investigating quantum thermodynamics using superconducting quantum machines coupled to thermal microwave waveguides.

fields

quant-ph 1

years

2025 1

verdicts

UNVERDICTED 1

representative citing papers

Intrinsic Hamiltonian of Mean Force and Strong-Coupling Quantum Thermodynamics

quant-ph · 2025-06-03 · unverdicted · novelty 6.0

A universal framework for strong-coupling quantum thermodynamics that defines an intrinsic Hamiltonian of mean force, preserves von Neumann entropy and standard gauge freedoms, and formulates first and second laws from microscopically accessible variables.

citing papers explorer

Showing 1 of 1 citing paper.

  • Intrinsic Hamiltonian of Mean Force and Strong-Coupling Quantum Thermodynamics quant-ph · 2025-06-03 · unverdicted · none · ref 27 · internal anchor

    A universal framework for strong-coupling quantum thermodynamics that defines an intrinsic Hamiltonian of mean force, preserves von Neumann entropy and standard gauge freedoms, and formulates first and second laws from microscopically accessible variables.