Publication | Open Access
Symmetry and the thermodynamics of currents in open quantum systems
74
Citations
84
References
2014
Year
Quantum DynamicEngineeringMany-body Quantum PhysicOpen Quantum SystemsTopological Quantum StateCoherent EnergyQuantum ComputingSymmetry (Physics)Quantum Mechanical PropertyQuantum TheoryQuantum EntanglementQubit Network ModelBiophysicsQuantum ScienceSymmetry SectorPhysicsNatural SciencesCondensed Matter PhysicsApplied PhysicsDisordered Quantum SystemQuantum Devices
Symmetry is a powerful concept in physics, and its recent application to understand nonequilibrium behavior is providing deep insights and groundbreaking exact results. Here we show how to harness symmetry to control transport and statistics in open quantum systems. Such control is enabled by a first-order-type dynamic phase transition in current statistics and the associated coexistence of different transport channels (or nonequilibrium steady states) classified by symmetry. Microreversibility then ensues, via the Gallavotti-Cohen fluctuation theorem, a twin dynamic phase transition for rare current fluctuations. Interestingly, the symmetry present in the initial state is spontaneously broken at the fluctuating level, where the quantum system selects the symmetry sector that maximally facilitates a given fluctuation. We illustrate these results in a qubit network model motivated by the problem of coherent energy harvesting in photosynthetic complexes, and introduce the concept of a symmetry-controlled quantum thermal switch, suggesting symmetry-based design strategies for quantum devices with controllable transport properties.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1