Quantum field thermal machines
M. Gluza, J. Sabino, N. H. Y. Ng, G. Vitagliano, M. Pezzutto, Y. Omar,, I. Mazets, M. Huber, J. Schmiedmayer, J. Eisert

TL;DR
This paper proposes a detailed blueprint for quantum field machines using ultra-cold atomic gases, enabling quantum thermodynamic cycles like cooling, which could advance experimental quantum thermodynamics and quantum information.
Contribution
It introduces a novel design for quantum field machines with practical implementation in ultra-cold gases, filling a gap in experimental quantum thermodynamics.
Findings
Designed quantum thermodynamic cycles for cooling.
Modelled quantum piston and valve using Bogoliubov theory.
Achieved active cooling in regimes where classical methods fail.
Abstract
Recent years have enjoyed an overwhelming interest in quantum thermodynamics, a field of research aimed at understanding thermodynamic tasks performed in the quantum regime. Further progress, however, seems to be obstructed by the lack of experimental implementations of thermal machines in which quantum effects play a decisive role. In this work, we introduce a blueprint of quantum field machines, which - once experimentally realized - would fill this gap. Even though the concept of the QFM presented here is very general and can be implemented in any many body quantum system that can be described by a quantum field theory. We provide here a detailed proposal how to realize a quantum machine in one-dimensional ultra-cold atomic gases, which consists of a set of modular operations giving rise to a piston. These can then be coupled sequentially to thermal baths, with the innovation that a…
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