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Quantum speed limit for thermal states

N. Il’in, Oleg Lychkovskiy

2021Physical review. A/Physical review, A23 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Quantum speed limits are rigorous estimates on how fast a state of a quantum system can depart from the initial state in the course of quantum evolution. Most known quantum speed limits, including the celebrated Mandelstam-Tamm and Margolus-Levitin ones, are general bounds applicable to arbitrary initial states. However, when applied to mixed states of many-body systems, they, as a rule, dramatically overestimate the speed of quantum evolution and fail to provide meaningful bounds in the thermodynamic limit. Here we derive a quantum speed limit for a closed system initially prepared in a thermal state and evolving under a time-dependent Hamiltonian. This quantum speed limit exploits the structure of the thermal state and, in particular, explicitly depends on the temperature. In a broad class of many-body setups it proves to be drastically stronger than general quantum speed limits.

Topics & Concepts

QuantumQuantum limitHamiltonian (control theory)PhysicsQuantum stateLimit (mathematics)ThermalQuantum systemSpeed limitClassical limitQuantum mechanicsStatistical physicsThermodynamic limitQuantum operationOpen quantum systemMathematicsMathematical analysisThermodynamicsMathematical optimizationArchaeologyHistoryAdvanced Thermodynamics and Statistical MechanicsQuantum Information and CryptographyQuantum many-body systems
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