The most accepted version of the third law of thermodynamics, the unattainability principle, states that any process cannot reach absolute zero temperature in a finite number of steps and within a finite time. Here, we provide a derivation of the principle that applies to arbitrary cooling processes, even those exploiting the laws of quantum mechanics or involving an infinite-dimensional reservoir. We quantify the resources needed to cool a system to any temperature, and translate these resources into the minimal time or number of steps, by considering the notion of a thermal machine that obeys similar restrictions to universal computers. We generally find that the obtainable temperature can scale as an inverse power of the cooling time. Ou...
The balance of forces and processes between the system and the environment and the processes inside ...
The thermodynamics of computation assumes that computational processes at the molecular level can be...
The thermodynamics of computation assumes that computational processes at the molecular level can be...
The unattainability principle (UP) is an operational formulation of the third law of thermodynamics ...
The third law of thermodynamics in the form of the unattainability principle states that exact grou...
We have made a simple and natural modification of a recent quantum refrigerator model presented by C...
Thermodynamics connects our knowledge of the world to our capability to manipulate and thus to contr...
The third law of thermodynamics, also known as the Nernst unattainability principle, puts a fundamen...
The third law of thermodynamics is formulated precisely: all points of the state space of zero tempe...
The third law of thermodynamics in the form of the unattainability principle states that exact groun...
The emergence of the laws of thermodynamics from the laws of quantum mechanics is an unresolved issu...
We study the asymptotic dynamics of arbitrary linear quantum open systems that are periodically driv...
The first in a long series of papers by John T. Lewis, G. W. Ford and the present author, considered...
cooling, absolute zero temperature Quantum thermodynamics supplies a consistent description of quant...
This paper introduces a postulate explicitly forbidding the extraction of an infinite amount of ener...
The balance of forces and processes between the system and the environment and the processes inside ...
The thermodynamics of computation assumes that computational processes at the molecular level can be...
The thermodynamics of computation assumes that computational processes at the molecular level can be...
The unattainability principle (UP) is an operational formulation of the third law of thermodynamics ...
The third law of thermodynamics in the form of the unattainability principle states that exact grou...
We have made a simple and natural modification of a recent quantum refrigerator model presented by C...
Thermodynamics connects our knowledge of the world to our capability to manipulate and thus to contr...
The third law of thermodynamics, also known as the Nernst unattainability principle, puts a fundamen...
The third law of thermodynamics is formulated precisely: all points of the state space of zero tempe...
The third law of thermodynamics in the form of the unattainability principle states that exact groun...
The emergence of the laws of thermodynamics from the laws of quantum mechanics is an unresolved issu...
We study the asymptotic dynamics of arbitrary linear quantum open systems that are periodically driv...
The first in a long series of papers by John T. Lewis, G. W. Ford and the present author, considered...
cooling, absolute zero temperature Quantum thermodynamics supplies a consistent description of quant...
This paper introduces a postulate explicitly forbidding the extraction of an infinite amount of ener...
The balance of forces and processes between the system and the environment and the processes inside ...
The thermodynamics of computation assumes that computational processes at the molecular level can be...
The thermodynamics of computation assumes that computational processes at the molecular level can be...