A shortcut to adiabaticity is concerned with the fast and robust manipulation of the dynamics of a quantum system which reproduces the effect of an adiabatic process. In this work, we use the time-rescaling method to study the problem of speeding up the population inversion of a two-level quantum system, and the fidelity of the fast dynamics versus systematic errors in the control parameters. This approach enables the generation of shortcuts from a prescribed slow dynamics by simply rescaling the time variable of the quantum evolution operator. It requires no knowledge of the eigenvalues and eigenstates of the Hamiltonian and, in principle, no additional coupling fields. From a quantum thermodynamic viewpoint, we also demonstrate that the main properties of the distribution of work required to drive the system along the shortcuts are unchanged with respect to the reference (slow) protocol.
A shortcut to adiabaticity (STA) is concerned with the fast and robust manipulation of the dynamics of a quantum system that reproduces the effect of an adiabatic process. A recently proposed method enables the generation of shortcuts from a prescribed slow dynamics by simply rescaling the time variable of the quantum evolution operator. This time-rescaling method does not demand knowledge about the eigenvalues and eigenstates of the Hamiltonian, and in many cases no additional coupling fields. Here, we use this approach to study the problem of speeding up the population inversion of a two-level quantum system. The fidelity of the dynamics versus systematic errors in the control parameters are shown to be comparable with other STA schemes. From a quantum thermodynamic viewpoint, we also demonstrate that the main properties of the distribution of work required to drivethe system along the shortcuts are unchanged with respect to the reference (slow) protocol.PACS numbers:
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