• Quantum engines with entanglement as fue

    From ScienceDaily@1337:3/111 to All on Mon Oct 19 21:30:30 2020
    Quantum engines with entanglement as fuel?

    Date:
    October 19, 2020
    Source:
    University of Rochester
    Summary:
    It's still more science fiction than science fact, but perfect
    energy efficiency may be one step closer due to new research
    by physicists.



    FULL STORY ==========================================================================
    In order to make a car run, a car's engine burns gasoline and converts the energy from the heat of the combusting gasoline into mechanical work. In
    the process, however, energy is wasted; a typical car only converts around
    25 percent of the energy in gasoline into useful energy to make it run.


    ========================================================================== Engines that run with 100 percent efficiency are still more science
    fiction than science fact, but new research from the University of
    Rochester may bring scientists one step closer to demonstrating an ideal transfer of energy within a system.

    Andrew Jordan, a professor of physics at Rochester, was recently
    awarded a three-year, $1 million grant from the Templeton Foundation to research quantum measurement engines -- engines that use the principles
    of quantum mechanics to run with 100 percent efficiency. The research,
    to be carried out with co- principal investigators in France and at
    Washington University St. Louis, could answer important questions
    about the laws of thermodynamics in quantum systems and contribute to technologies such as more efficient engines and quantum computers.

    "The grant deals with several Big Questions about our natural world,"
    Jordan says.

    PHYSICS AT A SMALL LEVEL The researchers have previously described the
    concept of quantum measurement engines, but the theory has never been demonstrated experimentally.



    ==========================================================================
    In the microscopic quantum world, particles exhibit unique properties that
    do not align with the classical laws of physics as we know them. Jordan
    and his colleagues will use superconducting circuits to design experiments
    that can be carried out within a realistic quantum system. Through these experiments, the researchers will study how the laws of energy, work,
    power, efficiency, heat, and entropy function at the quantum level. These concepts are currently poorly understood in quantum mechanics.

    MICROSCOPIC POWER TASKS Quantum measurement engines may work in
    microscopic environments for very small power tasks such as moving around
    an atom or charging a miniaturized circuit.

    In these capacities, they may be important components for quantum
    computers.

    This type of engine couldn't currently be used to power a car, however;
    the power in a quantum measurement engine is measured in the unit
    picowatts, with one picowatt equal to one million millionths of a
    watt. For comparison, a single lightbulb has about 60 watts of power.

    "The power scales involved -- numbers like picowatts -- indicate the large
    gap between our human interests and these tiny engines," Jordan says.



    ==========================================================================
    One way to make quantum measurement engines for human-scale activities
    may be "through massive parallelization," Jordan says. "Each device only outputs a tiny amount of energy, but by making billions of them working together, you could make a macroscopic engine from the ground up." A NEW
    TYPE OF FUEL Jordan and his team will also investigate another major area
    of research: how it might be possible to extract work from a system using entanglement as a fuel. In entanglement -- one of the basic of concepts
    of quantum physics -- the properties of one particle are interlinked with properties of another, even when the particles are separated by a large distance. Using entanglement as a fuel has the possibly revolutionary
    feature of creating a non-local engine; half of an engine could be in
    New York, while the other half could be in California. The energy would
    not be held by either half of the system, yet the two parts could still
    share energy to fuel both halves proficiently.

    "We will show that the engine can, in principle, be perfectly efficient," Jordan says. "That is, there would be an ideal transfer of energy
    from the measurement apparatus to the quantum system." The foundation
    award reflects the significance of quantum technology as a national and international priority, and Rochester's key role in the enterprise. The
    project itself builds on Rochester's robust history of research in
    optics and physics and current efforts to better unravel the mysteries
    of quantum mechanics.

    "The University of Rochester has an existing strength in quantum physics,
    and indeed was the birthplace of the field of quantum optics," Jordan
    says. "We have a good collection of quality researchers in place, a
    historical legacy of quantum physics, and ongoing University support of
    quantum physics."

    ========================================================================== Story Source: Materials provided by University_of_Rochester. Original
    written by Lindsey Valich. Note: Content may be edited for style and
    length.


    ==========================================================================


    Link to news story: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2020/10/201019090125.htm

    --- up 8 weeks, 6 hours, 50 minutes
    * Origin: -=> Castle Rock BBS <=- Now Husky HPT Powered! (1337:3/111)