Quantum-enhanced Landauer erasure and storage
Abstract: The erasure of a bit of information encoded in a physical system is an irreversible operation bound to dissipate an amount of energy $Q = k_\text{B} T\ln 2$. As a result, work $W \geq Q$ has to be applied to the physical system to restore the erased information content. This limit, called Landauer limit, sets a minimal energy dissipation inherent to any classical computation. In the pursuit of the fastest and most efficient means of computation, the ultimate challenge is to produce a memory device executing an operation as close to this limit in the shortest time possible. Here, we use a crystal of molecular nanomagnets as a spin-memory device and measure the work needed to carry out a storage operation. Exploiting a form of quantum annealing, we border the Landauer limit while preserving fast operation. Owing to the tunable and fast dynamics of this process, the performance of our device in terms of energy-time cost is orders of magnitude better than existing memory devices to date. This result suggests a way to enhance classical computations by using quantum processes.
Paper Prompts
Sign up for free to create and run prompts on this paper using GPT-5.
Top Community Prompts
Collections
Sign up for free to add this paper to one or more collections.