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arxiv: 2605.21833 · v1 · pith:SLV5IKIGnew · submitted 2026-05-20 · ❄️ cond-mat.mes-hall · quant-ph

Comment on "Entropic Costs of Extracting Classical Ticks from a Quantum Clock"

Pith reviewed 2026-05-22 08:06 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification ❄️ cond-mat.mes-hall quant-ph
keywords quantum clockdouble quantum dotentropic coststhermodynamic analysisclassical behaviorquantum correlationstimekeepingentropy production
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The pith

Double quantum dot device claimed as quantum clock shows only classical ticks without correlations

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

The paper points out that the double quantum dot system described in the original Letter functions as a classical clock rather than a quantum one, since there are no intrinsic temporal correlations linking successive ticks. It also argues that the entropy analysis in the Letter incorrectly combines dissipation from amplification and measurement, presenting it as a fundamental quantum cost when it is really an engineering issue. This matters because distinguishing these aspects clarifies whether quantum effects can provide any advantage in timekeeping or if costs are always classical in nature. If the critique holds, researchers should seek designs that truly leverage quantum coherence for clock performance.

Core claim

The central discovery is that the DQD-based quantum clock exhibits only classical behavior and lacks intrinsic temporal correlations between ticks, rendering it not a good clock for accurate time. The thermodynamic analysis misassigns entropy production and conflates amplification with measurement; therefore the reported combined entropy is an engineering dissipation, not a fundamental cost of quantum timekeeping.

What carries the argument

The mechanism of temporal correlations in tick sequences and the proper partitioning of entropy production between measurement and amplification stages.

If this is right

  • The device cannot be used to claim quantum advantages in timekeeping without added correlations.
  • Entropy costs of quantum clocks must be reassessed to exclude non-fundamental dissipations.
  • Future quantum clock realizations need to include tests for non-classical tick statistics.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

These are editorial extensions of the paper, not claims the author makes directly.

  • Experiments should measure tick interval correlations to confirm quantum behavior in similar devices.
  • This may apply to other attempts at quantum thermodynamics in mesoscopic systems where amplification is involved.
  • A testable extension is to engineer coherence in the dot system to introduce the missing correlations.

Load-bearing premise

That the original Letter presented the DQD device as a fundamental quantum clock with its entropy as a basic cost, rather than as a practical engineering demonstration.

What would settle it

A measurement showing non-Poissonian statistics or negative correlations in successive tick times from the double quantum dot would indicate quantum behavior and falsify the classical-only claim.

read the original abstract

A recent Letter by Wadhia et al. reports a realization of a quantum clock using a double quantum dot (DQD) [Phys. Rev. Lett. 135, 200407 (2005)]. This Comment identifies two fundamental issues: (I) the claimed ``quantum clock" exhibits only classical behavior and lacks intrinsic temporal correlations between ticks; it is not sufficient for accurate time as a good clock. (II) the thermodynamic analysis misassigns entropy production and conflates amplification with measurement; the reported combined entropy is an engineering dissipation, not a fundamental cost of quantum timekeeping.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

2 major / 1 minor

Summary. This manuscript is a Comment on the Letter by Wadhia et al. (Phys. Rev. Lett. 135, 200407 (2005)) reporting a double-quantum-dot realization of a quantum clock. It advances two objections: (I) the device exhibits only classical behavior and lacks intrinsic temporal correlations between ticks, rendering it insufficient to serve as an accurate quantum clock; (II) the thermodynamic analysis misassigns entropy production by conflating amplification with measurement, so that the reported combined entropy constitutes engineering dissipation rather than a fundamental cost of quantum timekeeping.

Significance. If the two objections are substantiated with direct textual and equation-level comparisons to the original Letter, the Comment would usefully sharpen the distinction between classical mesoscopic statistics and genuine quantum temporal correlations, and between practical dissipation channels and fundamental entropic bounds in quantum-clock thermodynamics. Such clarification would be of moderate significance to the quantum-thermodynamics community working on mesoscopic timekeeping.

major comments (2)
  1. [Abstract] Abstract, objection (I): the assertion that the DQD 'exhibits only classical behavior and lacks intrinsic temporal correlations between ticks' is central to the Comment yet rests on an interpretive reading of the original Letter. The manuscript does not reproduce or refute any specific passage, definition, or data set from Wadhia et al. that would establish the stronger claim being critiqued; without such anchoring, the objection risks addressing a straw-man version of the original work.
  2. [Abstract] Abstract, objection (II): the claim that the reported combined entropy is 'an engineering dissipation, not a fundamental cost of quantum timekeeping' is load-bearing for the thermodynamic critique. The Comment does not supply a side-by-side re-derivation or citation of the original entropy-balance equations (or the precise definitions of measurement versus amplification) that would demonstrate the misassignment; this absence weakens the ability to verify the distinction on technical grounds.
minor comments (1)
  1. The citation to the original Letter gives the year as 2005; given volume 135 this is almost certainly a typographical error and should be corrected.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

2 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for the careful and constructive review. We agree that explicit textual and equation-level anchoring to the original Letter will strengthen the Comment and remove any ambiguity about the targets of our critique. We address each point below and will incorporate the suggested clarifications in a revised manuscript.

read point-by-point responses
  1. Referee: [Abstract] Abstract, objection (I): the assertion that the DQD 'exhibits only classical behavior and lacks intrinsic temporal correlations between ticks' is central to the Comment yet rests on an interpretive reading of the original Letter. The manuscript does not reproduce or refute any specific passage, definition, or data set from Wadhia et al. that would establish the stronger claim being critiqued; without such anchoring, the objection risks addressing a straw-man version of the original work.

    Authors: We accept the referee's point that the abstract would be clearer with direct references. The full manuscript already draws on the reported tick statistics and correlation functions in Wadhia et al., which are consistent with classical Poisson processes and show no evidence of quantum coherence or non-classical temporal correlations. In revision we will add explicit citations to the relevant sections and figures of the original Letter that define the tick-generation protocol and present the measured waiting-time distributions, thereby anchoring the claim that the device operates in the classical regime. revision: yes

  2. Referee: [Abstract] Abstract, objection (II): the claim that the reported combined entropy is 'an engineering dissipation, not a fundamental cost of quantum timekeeping' is load-bearing for the thermodynamic critique. The Comment does not supply a side-by-side re-derivation or citation of the original entropy-balance equations (or the precise definitions of measurement versus amplification) that would demonstrate the misassignment; this absence weakens the ability to verify the distinction on technical grounds.

    Authors: We agree that a side-by-side comparison will make the thermodynamic distinction more transparent. The original Letter combines the entropy cost of the projective measurement with the dissipative cost of the subsequent charge amplification without separating the two contributions. In the revised manuscript we will reproduce the relevant entropy-balance equations from Wadhia et al. and juxtapose them with our decomposition, showing that the amplification stage contributes an engineering dissipation that is not required by the quantum-clock thermodynamics itself. revision: yes

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No circularity in comment's critique of quantum clock Letter

full rationale

The paper is a short comment that identifies two issues in a prior Letter by contrasting the DQD device against standard definitions of quantum clocks, temporal correlations, and thermodynamic entropy costs drawn from external literature. No derivation chain, parameter fitting, or self-citation load-bearing steps are present; the claims rest on mismatches with independent benchmarks rather than any redefinition or reduction of outputs to the comment's own inputs.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 2 axioms · 0 invented entities

The comment rests on standard definitions of quantum clocks and thermodynamic entropy already established in the field; it introduces no new free parameters, axioms, or invented entities.

axioms (2)
  • domain assumption A good quantum clock must exhibit intrinsic temporal correlations between ticks that distinguish it from classical behavior.
    Invoked when stating that the DQD device lacks these correlations and is therefore not a sufficient quantum clock.
  • domain assumption Thermodynamic analysis of a quantum clock must separate fundamental entropy production from engineering dissipation such as amplification.
    Used to argue that the reported combined entropy is not a fundamental cost.

pith-pipeline@v0.9.0 · 5620 in / 1274 out tokens · 36372 ms · 2026-05-22T08:06:33.096975+00:00 · methodology

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Reference graph

Works this paper leans on

10 extracted references · 10 canonical work pages

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    V. Wadhia, F. Meier, F. Fedele, R. Silva, N. Nurgalieva, D. L. Craig, D. Jirovec, J. Saez-Mollejo, A. Ballabio, D. Chrastina, G. Isella, M. Huber, M. T

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