Litcius/Paper detail

Experimental test of fluctuation relations for driven open quantum systems with an NV center

Santiago Hernández-Gómez, Nicolas Staudenmaier, Michele Campisi, Nicole Fabbri

2021New Journal of Physics31 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract The experimental verification of quantum fluctuation relations for driven open quantum system is currently a challenge, due to the conceptual and operative difficulty of distinguishing work and heat. The nitrogen-vacancy (NV) center in diamond has been recently proposed as a controlled test bed to study fluctuation relations in the presence of an engineered dissipative channel, in absence of work (Hernández-Gómez et al 2020 Phys. Rev. Res. 2 023327). Here, we extend those studies to exploring the validity of quantum fluctuation relations in a driven-dissipative scenario, where the spin exchanges energy both with its surroundings because of a thermal gradient, and with an external work source. We experimentally prove the validity of the quantum fluctuation relations in the presence of cyclic driving in two cases, when the spin exchanges energy with an effective infinite-temperature reservoir, and when the total work vanishes at stroboscopic times—although the power delivered to the NV center is non-null. Our results represent the first experimental study of quantum fluctuation relation in driven open quantum systems.

Topics & Concepts

PhysicsQuantumDissipative systemWork (physics)Open quantum systemQuantum mechanicsQuantum discordSpin (aerodynamics)Statistical physicsQuantum fluctuationThermalEnergy (signal processing)Quantum systemQuantum informationTheoretical physicsQuantum processQuantum operationQuantum thermodynamicsQuantum dissipationCenter (category theory)Power (physics)Open system (computing)Quantum decoherenceQuantum technologyQuantum phasesThermal fluctuationsClassical mechanicsRelation (database)Quantum error correctionDiamond and Carbon-based Materials ResearchMechanical and Optical ResonatorsAdvanced Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics