Noise-induced Quantum Synchronization and Entanglement in a Quantum Analog of Huygens' Clock
POSTER
Abstract
We propose a quantum analogue of the Huygens clock, where the phases of two spins synchronize through
their interaction with a shared environment. This environment acts like the escapement mechanism in a
mechanical clock, regulating the gear train and allowing discrete timing advances. In our model, the relative
phases of the two spins synchronize via a mutual correlated environment. We demonstrate that for a system of
qubits, several arguments can significantly reduce the cardinality of allowed measurements, thus simplifying
the problem. We present a numerically efficient method to calculate the degree of quantumness in the
correlations of the final density matrix, providing a tight upper bound for rank-3 and rank-4 density matrices.
We conclude by suggesting a potential realization of noise-induced synchronization between two nuclear spins
coupled to a common ancilla undergoing dynamical decoupling.
their interaction with a shared environment. This environment acts like the escapement mechanism in a
mechanical clock, regulating the gear train and allowing discrete timing advances. In our model, the relative
phases of the two spins synchronize via a mutual correlated environment. We demonstrate that for a system of
qubits, several arguments can significantly reduce the cardinality of allowed measurements, thus simplifying
the problem. We present a numerically efficient method to calculate the degree of quantumness in the
correlations of the final density matrix, providing a tight upper bound for rank-3 and rank-4 density matrices.
We conclude by suggesting a potential realization of noise-induced synchronization between two nuclear spins
coupled to a common ancilla undergoing dynamical decoupling.
Publication: arXiv: 2407.17388<br>Journal: The Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters<br>Manuscript ID: jz-2024-023138.R3
Presenters
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Bhavay Tyagi
University of Houston
Authors
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Bhavay Tyagi
University of Houston
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Hao Li
University of Houston
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Eric R Bittner
University of Houston
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Andrei Piryatinski
Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL)
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Carlos Silva
Georgia Institute of Technology