Litcius/Paper detail

Precision is not limited by the second law of thermodynamics

Florian Meier, Y. Minoguchi, Simon Sundelin, Tony J. G. Apollaro, Paul Erker, Simone Gasparinetti, Marcus Huber

2025Nature Physics12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Physical devices operating out of equilibrium are affected by thermal fluctuations, limiting their operational precision. This issue is particularly pronounced at microscopic and quantum scales, where its mitigation requires additional entropy dissipation. Understanding this constraint is important for both fundamental physics and technological design. Clocks, for example, need a thermodynamic flux towards equilibrium to measure time, resulting in a minimum entropy dissipation per clock tick. Although classical and quantum models often show a linear relationship between precision and dissipation, the ultimate bounds on this relationship remain unclear. Here we present an autonomous quantum many-body clock model that achieves clock precision that scales exponentially with entropy dissipation. This is enabled by coherent transport in a spin chain with tailored couplings, where dissipation is confined to a single link. The result demonstrates that coherent quantum dynamics can surpass the traditional thermodynamic precision limits, potentially guiding the development of future high-precision, low-dissipation quantum devices.

Topics & Concepts

PhysicsDissipationStatistical physicsQuantumQuantum thermodynamicsEntropy (arrow of time)Second law of thermodynamicsEntropy productionNon-equilibrium thermodynamicsClassical mechanicsQuantum mechanicsAdvanced Thermodynamics and Statistical MechanicsQuantum Information and CryptographyCold Atom Physics and Bose-Einstein Condensates
Precision is not limited by the second law of thermodynamics | Litcius