Fundamental Energy Requirement of Reversible Quantum Operations


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Date

2021-04

Publication Type

Journal Article

ETH Bibliography

yes

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Abstract

Landauer’s principle asserts that any computation has an unavoidable energy cost that grows proportionally to its degree of logical irreversibility. But even a logically reversible operation, when run on a physical processor that operates on different energy levels, requires energy. Here we quantify this energy requirement, providing upper and lower bounds that coincide up to a constant factor. We derive these bounds from a general quantum resource-theoretic argument, which implies that the initial resource requirement for implementing a unitary operation within an error ε grows like 1/√ε times the amount of resource generated by the operation. Applying these results to quantum circuits, we find that their energy requirement can, by an appropriate design, be made independent of their time complexity.

Publication status

published

Editor

Book title

Volume

11 (2)

Pages / Article No.

21014

Publisher

American Physical Society

Event

Edition / version

Methods

Software

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Date collected

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Subject

Organisational unit

03781 - Renner, Renato / Renner, Renato check_circle

Notes

Funding

165843 - Fully quantum thermodynamics of finite-size systems (SNF)
188541 - Information-theoretic limits to time measurements (SNF)

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