1. Introduction
Quantum state teleportation (QST) is widely recognized for its ability to transfer quantum states to distant locations [
1,
2,
3]. However, it is well understood that the energy associated with a quantum state cannot be teleported, as the sender transmits only information about the state. Using this information, along with classical communication and shared entanglement, the receiver reconstructs the quantum state. The energy required for this reconstruction is supplied locally by the receiver, rather than being teleported from the sender.
In contrast, a related protocol, quantum energy teleportation (QET), was believed to enable the teleportation of energy [
4,
5]. Similarly to QST, QET relies on classical communication. However, QET protocols impose stricter constraints compared to QST. While QST only requires the sender and receiver to share an entangled state, QET further requires that this state be the ground state of an interacting Hamiltonian. Additionally, in QST, the sender performs a measurement and transmits the outcome to the receiver via a classical communication channel. In QET, however, the observable used for the measurement must also commute with the interaction term in the Hamiltonian, ensuring that the local energy of the receiver remains undisturbed prior to the teleportation process.
Since its initial discovery in spin-chain systems [
4,
6], QET has been extensively explored in many other physical systems. Theoretical studies have investigated its application in relativistic quantum field theory [
7,
8], trapped ions [
9], harmonic oscillators [
10], black-hole physics [
11], linear harmonic chains [
12], quantum Hall systems [
13], Gibbs spin particles [
14,
15], squeezed vacuum states [
16], topological orders [
17], and quantum information science [
18]. More recently, experimental efforts have demonstrated progress toward realizing QET, including in an NMR system [
19] and on superconducting quantum hardware [
20]. The combination of QST and QET was proposed to enable a long-range QET protocol [
21]. A trade-off relationship between QST and QET was proposed, suggesting their potential exclusivity [
22]. In [
23], a relation between QET and quantum steering was suggested.
However, despite its name, the QET protocol does not physically teleport energy between distant locations. Instead, the sender’s classical message only enables the receiver to access energy that was previously inaccessible prior to the implementation of the protocol [
19]. This argument can be further supported in [
24], where the receiver’s extracted energy can exceed the sender’s injected energy, indicating that the extracted energy cannot originate from the sender. This inaccessibility of energy extraction can be rigorously described by the concept of
strong local passive (SLP) states [
25,
26]. An SLP state is a multipartite quantum state, denoted by
, where no local quantum operation
applied to a subsystem can extract energy from the total system, characterized by the Hamiltonian
H. Mathematically, this is expressed as the nonnegativity of the energy difference:
In a QET protocol, the two parties share an SLP state, preventing the receiver from locally extracting energy. The sender then measures its local qubit, but the two-qubit system remains in an SLP state, meaning the receiver still cannot extract energy. However, classical communication between the sender and receiver breaks this limitation, making
negative. A negative
indicates that the receiver can locally extract energy, overcoming the restriction imposed by SLP.
However, previous QET protocols have been studied only under scenarios with strict constraints on the initial shared state and/or on the sender’s measurement observables. In our view, these constraints arise from the initial misconception—reinforced by the name “quantum energy teleportation”—that QET directly teleports energy between distant locations, as well as from insufficient attention to the connection between QET and SLP.
In this work, we demonstrate that SLP can arise beyond these conventional constraints, establishing the necessity of QET in a wider range of scenarios for local energy extraction. Specifically, by introducing the concept of a “local effective Hamiltonian,” we construct an SLP state that satisfies none of these restrictions, yet still forbids local energy extraction. As a result, energy extraction is only possible through a QET protocol. In this sense, relaxing these constraints reveals that situations where energy remains locally inaccessible are more common than previously thought, broadening the applicability of QET. As a separate and technical advantage, the local effective Hamiltonian simplifies the identification of optimal operations for the receiver, enabling maximal energy extraction without the need for cumbersome optimization techniques. Therefore, our results not only deepen the understanding of QET and its connection to SLP states but also expand its potential applications in quantum science and technology.
Finally, we implement our new protocol on quantum hardware, confirming both its theoretical correctness and experimental feasibility.
2. Quantum Energy Teleportation and Locally Inaccessible Energy
To begin, we revisit the minimal model of QET introduced in [
27], which involves two qubits,
A and
B, shared between the sender (Alice) and the receiver (Bob). The Hamiltonian of the system is given by
where
h and
are positive constants, and
and
(with
) are the Pauli-
X and Pauli-
Z operators for qubit
i. The two qubits are initially prepared in the ground state
of
, expressed as
where
. Since the ground state has the lowest possible energy, neither Alice nor Bob can extract any energy from
.
To enable energy extraction, the QET protocol requires Alice to measure her local qubit using the operators
, where
. Alice’s measurement pushes the system away from the ground state
, thus injecting energy into the system. But the measurement operators commute with the interaction Hamiltonian:
This commutativity ensures that Alice’s injected energy stays localized with her. Specifically, the measurement only affects the expectation value of the
term in Equation (
2), which corresponds to Alice’s qubit. In contrast, the terms associated with Bob,
, remain unaffected.
Notably, after Alice’s measurement, the state of the system becomes
with
representing Bob’s local states after the measurement. The state
is an SLP state, meaning that Bob cannot extract energy from it using any local general operation
, as explained earlier.
For Bob to access the inaccessible energy within Equation (
4), the QET protocol requires Alice to communicate her measurement outcome to Bob, based on which Bob applies a conditional operator,
to his qubit, where
, with the sign ± depending on Alice’s measurement outcome.
Y is the Pauli-
Y operator. The resulting state, expressed as
exhibits a negative energy difference:
This negativity indicates that Bob’s conditional operation successfully breaks the limit of strong local passivity, allowing him to extract the previously inaccessible energy that would remain unavailable without Alice’s classical communication. For our parameter setting,
and
, which will be used in the next section, the extracted energy for this protocol is 0.1114.
It is important to clarify that after Alice’s measurement, the SLP property of the system is fragile and can vanish as the system evolves under
. Consequently, Bob’s local energy extraction is, in principle, possible even without Alice’s message, provided he waits for an appropriate duration for the system to evolve and then applies a final local operation to extract energy. Nevertheless, we emphasize that the key advantage of QET lies in its speed. When relativistic constraints are not considered, Alice’s message can travel much faster than the natural timescale of the system’s evolution [
28]. This enables Bob to extract energy almost instantaneously, distinguishing QET from conventional energy extraction mechanisms.
We point out that the following constraints have been widely assumed for previous QET protocols. However, these constraints are intrinsically irrelevant to the SLP property of quantum states and should not be assumed as fundamental for applications of QET. Yet, they still appear consistently in discussions of QET. In this work, we demonstrate that these constraints are not required for a state to exhibit SLP. Consequently, even when these constraints are relaxed, QET remains essential for enabling local energy extraction. The constraints are as follows:
- (a)
Ground State: It has been argued that if a density matrix
commutes with the Hamiltonian,
, and the population of the ground state
exceeds a threshold
(as defined in [
25]), then
is an SLP state. Consequently, most existing QET protocols initialize the system in the ground state
of
, ensuring that the state after Alice’s measurement retains sufficient population in
to preserve the SLP property. However, this condition is only sufficient, not necessary. We show that a system can exhibit SLP even when initialized in an excited pure state with zero population in
. Moreover, after Alice’s measurement, the resulting state can still be an SLP state, requiring Bob to rely on Alice’s information for energy extraction. While it is intuitive that energy extraction is forbidden from a ground state, it is counter-intuitive that energy can also be blocked for certain excited states. This suggests that the common understanding that only ground states prevent energy extraction may be incomplete.
- (b)
Commutativity: To construct an SLP scenario that prevents Bob from locally extracting energy, it is typically assumed that Alice’s measurement does not increase the energy in Bob’s surroundings, which further requires Alice’s measurement observable to commute with the interaction term in , ensuring that her measurement does not inject energy into Bob’s surroundings. However, we emphasize that the SLP property stands on its own and is independent of this assumption. We demonstrate that even when Alice’s measurement observable does not commute with the interaction term, the resulting state can still exhibit SLP. Consequently, Bob still requires the QET protocol for local energy extraction.
- (c)
Entanglement: It was believed that the shared state between Alice and Bob must be entangled for Alice’s measurement to have any influence on Bob’s subsystem. It was believed that
“a large amount of teleported energy requests a large amount of consumption of the ground-state entanglement between A and B in this model” [
5]. Relations were further studied between the entanglement breaking due to Alice’s measurement and the teleported energy [
27]. Arguments also suggested that if the ground state is entangled and Alice’s measurement disentangles the system, it becomes impossible for Bob, using only local operations and classical communications, to restore the entangled ground state and extract energy [
26]. Along the same line, it was also suggested that quantum resources can improve the energy extraction efficiency for QET [
29]. However, we demonstrate that entanglement is not a strict requirement for the exhibition of SLP and the application of QET. In fact, in our proposed protocol, the shared state between Alice and Bob remains disentangled throughout the entire process, yet the system still exhibits the SLP property. To understand this, we introduce the concept of a
local effective Hamiltonian. We show that Alice’s actions can influence Bob’s subsystem not only by changing the “departure state" through entanglement but also by changing the “destination state" via Bob’s local effective Hamiltonian. As long as either the departure or destination state is affected, conditional operations are required to break SLP for Bob’s local energy extraction. Therefore, the necessity of entanglement can be relaxed if Alice’s measurements can influence the destination state alone.
We note that some previous works have gone beyond one or two of the constraints discussed above. For example, Ref. [
14] considered a QET protocol with an initial Gibbs state that may contain no entanglement, while Ref. [
24] introduced a class of initial states that are not ground states. However, in both cases, the SLP condition was analyzed only before Alice’s measurement—not afterward. It can be readily verified that their post-measurement states can violate the SLP condition, meaning that classical communication is not required for Bob’s energy extraction. As a result, these protocols do not truly require the implementation of QET. In contrast, our work not only emphasizes the importance of verifying the SLP condition after Alice’s measurement but also relaxes all three constraints within one single and minimal protocol.
3. Strong Local Passivity Relaxing Previous Constraints
We propose a new QET protocol involving two qubits,
A and
B, shared between Alice and Bob, under the following flip-flop Hamiltonian:
where
Z,
X, and
Y represent the Pauli matrices, and
are the qubit raising and lowering operators.
Compared to Equation (
2), this Hamiltonian replaces one of the two
terms with a
interaction term. Consequently, the total interaction term,
, cannot be factorized. As we will show later, this replacement will greatly enhance the amount of energy that can be extracted by Bob.
We consider the deep strong coupling regime [
30], setting
. In this regime, the Hamiltonian in Equation (
8) has four eigenstates with corresponding eigenvalues:
We choose the first excited state,
, as the initial state. Alice then measures her qubit
A using the operators
. Regardless of the outcome, Bob’s qubit remains in state
, as the qubits are disentangled. The density matrix after Alice’s measurement is
To verify whether this state is SLP for Bob according to the Hamiltonian Equation (
8), one would need to check the inequality in Equation (
1), which involves parameterizing Bob’s general operation with 12 parameters for a qubit completely positive trace-preserving (CPTP) map [
31,
32,
33,
34]. However, a necessary and sufficient condition for determining whether a state
is SLP for a Hamiltonian
H is given by a
matrix
, the form of which is defined in [
26] and given in
Appendix A. Specifically,
is SLP for
H if and only if
is positive semi-definite.
In our case, it is straightforward to verify that both
and
share the identical eigenvalue set,
, all of which are nonnegative, confirming that these two matrices are positive semi-definite. Thus, starting from the first excited state
, Bob cannot extract energy locally. After Alice’s measurement, the state evolves to Equation (
10), and Bob still cannot extract energy locally. Instead, Bob needs communication from Alice for his energy extraction.
In contrast, if we had started with any of the other three eigenstates in Equation (
9), including the ground state
, the resulting states after Alice’s measurement would not maintain the SLP property. Specifically, starting from the ground state, and performing Alice’s measurement, we compute the
M matrix of the resulting state and find its four eigenvalues to be
. This confirms that the post-measurement state is not an SLP state, meaning QET protocols are not necessary for Bob’s energy extraction. Therefore, our initial choice of the first excited state
is well justified.
Through the new protocol, we observe that all three previously considered constraints for QET are relaxed. First, the system is initialized in an excited state where the ground-state population is zero. Second, although Alice’s measurement does not commute with the interaction term , it does not inject energy into this term, as remains 0 throughout the entire process. Finally, the system begins in the product state , meaning Alice’s measurement cannot directly affect Bob’s local state.
At first glance, it may seem puzzling that Alice’s measurement is needed in a product-state construction, as the measurement cannot affect Bob’s local state. To address this, below we introduce the concept of a local effective Hamiltonian for Bob. We show that, for energy extraction, Bob must rotate his local state to the ground state of this effective Hamiltonian. In a product-state setup, Alice’s measurement does not alter Bob’s initial (“departure”) state, but it does modify the effective Hamiltonian—and thus the ground (“destination”) state of this Hamiltonian that Bob must reach. As a result, classical communication from Alice remains necessary to inform Bob of the appropriate rotation. In general, conditional operations are required to break the SLP constraint as long as one of the departure or destination states is contingent on Alice’s measurement. Notably, this allows the relaxation of the entanglement requirement when Alice’s measurement only influences the destination state.
Now we introduce Bob’s local effective Hamiltonian. Since the two qubits remain disentangled after Alice’s measurement, the total energy of the system is given by
where
denotes the expectation value of the operator · with respect to Alice’s state
, and similarly for
with respect to Bob’s state.
If Alice’s measurement yields the outcome +, her state collapses to
, and the total energy becomes
implying that Bob’s effective Hamiltonian is
. Similarly, if Alice’s outcome is −, Bob’s effective Hamiltonian becomes
.
One might wonder whether this effective Hamiltonian has a dynamical effect on Bob’s qubit. The answer is yes. To show this, Alice fixes her state after the measurement using the quantum Zeno effect [
35,
36,
37], by repeatedly measuring her state at a rate much faster than the timescale of
, which is commonly characterized by
.
By assuming that Alice’s measurement outcome is + (the analysis for − follows similarly), the general two-qubit state is given by
Under Schrödinger’s equation, the time evolution of the state is
where the second term represents free evolution under
, and the first term enforces the projective operator due to Alice’s repeated measurements.
Using
and
, the evolution simplifies to
or, equivalently,
Similarly, for the − outcome, Bob’s effective Hamiltonian becomes
. Thus, the local effective Hamiltonian for Bob is
For Bob to extract energy using Alice’s information, we diagonalize the effective Hamiltonian Equation (
17). The ground states
and excited states
of the effective Hamiltonian, together with their eigenvalues, are given by
where
. The effective Hamiltonian can be reformulated as
We now highlight an additional advantage of introducing the local effective Hamiltonian (
17). In general QET protocols, determining Bob’s optimal conditional operations for maximal energy extraction required cumbersome optimization techniques, typically involving the parameterization of a general single-qubit unitary operation (for example, see [
38]). However, once the conditional Hamiltonian is established, Bob’s optimal operations simply correspond to unitary transformations that rotate his current state to the conditional ground states
of the effective Hamiltonians.
Specifically, in our case, to extract energy, Bob applies to his qubit the conditional RY gate,
, which rotates his initial state
to the corresponding ground state
. This highlights the role of the effective Hamiltonian: although Alice and Bob are initially unentangled, Alice’s measurement influences Bob by modifying his destination state via the effective Hamiltonian. Thus, entanglement is not required in this QET protocol. As can be verified, the amount of energy that Bob extracts is
For our parameter setting, and , which will be used in the next section, the extracted energy is amplified, reaching up to 0.8028, which is 7.2 times higher than that of the original QET protocol, where the extracted energy was only 0.1114. This further highlights the advantage of our newly proposed QET protocol.
One might argue that the observed enhancement in energy extraction simply results from the use of an excited initial state in the new protocol, in contrast to the use of the ground state in the original protocol, which naturally provides more available energy for Bob to extract. This raises an important question: under what standard should we understand the enhancement in energy extraction?
We emphasize that the use of the initial state in the new protocol depends on the choice of system parameters. Our intention in selecting the excited state was simply to demonstrate that such a state can also exhibit the SLP property. However, in general, one can tune the parameters so that
, making the same state
the ground state of the system. In this case, the SLP property still holds: the state
remains SLP both before and after Alice’s measurement in the Pauli-
X basis. As a result, Bob still requires the QET protocol to extract local energy, and all subsequent discussions remain valid. In this alternative scenario, we can directly compare the amount of energy Bob can extract in the two protocols, as shown in
Figure 1.
From the figure, we observe that the enhancement in extracted energy enabled by our new protocol is a universal feature across all values of
. This enhancement is not due to initializing the system in an excited state for the new protocol, as opposed to the ground-state initialization in the original protocol. In fact, for both protocols, Bob’s local state after Alice’s measurement is “excited” in terms of the corresponding local effective Hamiltonian. The true source of the enhancement lies in the fact that
in Equation (
20) is greater than
in Equation (
7). This arises because, in the new protocol, Bob’s departure states coincide—i.e., they are independent of Alice’s measurement outcome. The coincidence of the departure states leads to a larger distance from the destination states, thereby allowing more energy to be extracted. This coincidence arises from the absence of initial entanglement, such that Alice’s measurement does not affect Bob’s local states. We thus demonstrate that relaxing the entanglement constraint can enhance the performance of the QET protocol in terms of energy extraction.
As a side remark, we noticed a similar study [
38] that explores QET using the same Hamiltonian, Equation (
8), as ours. In their analysis, the entangled ground state
was chosen as the system’s initial state. However, as has been discussed, the post-measurement state derived from this ground state does not exhibit the SLP property, making QET protocols unnecessary for Bob’s energy extraction. Instead, the excited state
must be used to apply QET. Furthermore, since their approach does not incorporate our developed concept of local effective Hamiltonians, they rely on optimization methods to determine Bob’s unitary operations for optimal energy extraction. This further highlights the advantages of our results.
In this section, we presented a particular QET protocol that relaxes all three constraints. In the
Appendix B we further show how to construct a family of such protocols that also relax these constraints. This demonstrates that the phenomenon of locally inaccessible energy is widespread in the entire quantum Hilbert space, implying a broader necessity and applicability of QET protocols.
4. Experimental Verification of QET Protocol on Quantum Hardware
To validate the feasibility of our proposed QET protocol and demonstrate that the three traditional constraints are unnecessary, we implement the protocol on IBM quantum hardware. The quantum circuit used for this implementation is shown in
Figure 2, which includes mid-circuit measurements, often referred to as dynamic circuits.
Recently, IBM hardware has removed its support for dynamic circuits. To address this limitation, we adopt the approach introduced in [
20], replacing Bob’s conditional operations with two-qubit controlled operations while delaying Alice’s measurement until after these controlled operations. It can be shown that the two approaches are equivalent in the sense that they produce the same final density matrix.
To show this, suppose that Bob’s operation is
, conditional on Alice’s measurement outcome ±. After Alice’s measurement and Bob’s operation, the state becomes
Alternatively, in the modified quantum circuit, the two-qubit controlled unitary operations are applied first. The state is first transformed as
After this transformation, Alice performs her delayed measurement. This measurement projects the state in Equation (
22) into the same final state as Equation (
21), showing the equivalence of the two approaches.
In our case, the original quantum circuit for our protocol is shown in
Figure 2, where the initial state is
. The red block represents Alice’s measurement in the basis
. The yellow block represents Bob’s conditional operation based on Alice’s classical information. The blue block corresponds to the final measurement used to check the energy.
Instead, we replace the original circuit with the modified version shown in
Figure 3. In this circuit, the yellow block is first implemented, which corresponds to Bob’s controlled operation based on Alice’s quantum state in her computational basis. The red block now represents Alice’s delayed measurement. The two circuits are equivalent, as they yield the same final density matrix and identical measurement outcomes for any observables.
For the choice of parameters, without loss of generality, we choose
. Then we choose
, which satisfies the relation
. By substituting these into Equation (
20), we have the analytical value of the extracted energy as
.
Next, for the number of shots, we use 20,000 shots for each observable measurement, as can be justified by applying Chebyshev’s inequality:
where
is the statistical mean obtained from the measurements of an arbitrary observable
, and
is its theoretical expectation value. In our case,
is always a Pauli word (product of individual Pauli operators), so
is upper-bounded by 1. This gives the relation
.
For , if we set , we find . This implies that there is at most a probability that our measurement outcome deviates from the true value by more than . This level of accuracy is sufficient for our experimental purposes.
For the backends, we choose three available IBM hardware backends:
ibm_brussels,
ibm_kyiv, and
ibm_torino. Detailed specifications for these backends, along with their qubit distribution maps, are provided in
Appendix C. Additionally, we execute the circuits using the
AerSimulator, a classical simulator capable of running quantum circuits locally on personal computers. When no noise is introduced, the
AerSimulator is expected to produce exact results, serving as a benchmark for the design of the quantum circuits.
The measurement results are listed in
Table 1. In the left table, we report the measurements of the three operators
,
, and
prior to Bob applying his conditional operations. In the right table, these operators are measured after Bob has applied his conditional operations. The energy that we are interested in is given by
The term
is omitted from our calculation, as it remains unaffected by Bob’s conditional operations.
is compared before and after Bob’s conditional operations. If the energy in the right table is smaller than that in the left table, it indicates that Bob’s conditional operation has successfully extracted energy from the system.
The standard deviations in these measurements arise only from statistical fluctuations and do not account for systematic errors introduced by the near-term intermediate-scale quantum (NISQ) nature of IBM hardware. To minimize systematic errors, we use the measurement error mitigation technique [
39], implemented as a built-in function within IBM’s
qiskit package, by setting the resilience level to 1. This approach effectively reduces errors occurring during the measurement process of the quantum circuit. These corrections are directly incorporated into the expectation values of each measurement outcome, while the standard deviations only reflect statistical uncertainty.
By comparing the results in the two panels, the extracted energy can be calculated and is presented in
Table 2. The standard deviation for the extracted energy is determined using the error propagation formula. Specifically, since
, the standard deviation is given by
. Notably, the
ibm_torino backend produced results closer to the analytical solution compared to the other two backends. This improvement is attributed to the newer Heron processor used by
ibm_torino, whereas the other two backends use Eagle processors. Further details about these processors are provided in
Appendix C.
The results demonstrate that all three quantum hardware backends successfully provide positive extracted energy. This confirms the experimental feasibility of our newly proposed QET protocol and further establishes the fact that the three previously considered constraints for QET are unnecessary.
Regarding our experimental setup in
Figure 3, one might initially wonder why the Hamiltonian term appears to be missing from the circuit and, consequently, how energy can be extracted from the quantum system. We clarify that our implementation uses quantum hardware to simulate the QET process. The effect of a Hamiltonian
H in a physical process is fully captured by its time evolution operator,
, which can be efficiently implemented using quantum circuits to simulate the evolution of qubit states under their interaction.
Importantly, the QET protocol assumes nonrelativistic conditions, allowing signals to propagate much faster than the system’s natural evolution. Furthermore, all steps in a QET protocol—including Alice’s initial measurement, Bob’s conditional operations, and final energy measurement—can, in principle, occur on timescales much shorter than that of the Hamiltonian
H. As a result, the system’s time evolution during these steps is approximately the identity operator,
, making the Hamiltonian’s evolutional effect negligible in our circuits. Nevertheless, this does not undermine the validity of our quantum simulation, which successfully demonstrates local energy extraction enabled by QET, as can be observed in
Table 1.
5. Summary
Quantum state teleportation (QST) is a well-established protocol for transferring quantum states between distant locations. However, the energy required to reconstruct the quantum state is provided by the receiver (Bob), rather than being transmitted directly from the sender (Alice). As a result, QST is not capable of teleporting energy. To address this, the quantum energy teleportation (QET) protocol was introduced. However, unlike QST, the scenarios where QET is needed impose stricter constraints. These include the need for the initial state shared by Alice and Bob to be entangled and to correspond to the ground state of an interacting Hamiltonian. Additionally, the observable used by Alice for her measurement must commute with the interaction term in the Hamiltonian. These constraints are overly restrictive and limit the broader applicability of the protocol.
A key understanding of the QET protocol is that no energy is actually teleported from Alice to Bob within the protocol. Instead, Alice’s message acts as a key that enables Bob to access and extract his local energy, which was previously inaccessible due to strong local passivity (SLP). In light of this insight, the previously considered “reasonable” constraints for QET appear unnecessary. Nevertheless, these strict conditions are still widely regarded as essential in recent discussions of QET protocols.
In this work, we demonstrate that SLP can arise beyond these conventional constraints, establishing the necessity of QET in a wider range of scenarios for local energy extraction. Specifically, Alice and Bob begin with a product state, which corresponds to an excited eigenstate of the Hamiltonian rather than its ground state. Furthermore, Alice’s measurement does not commute with the interaction term of the Hamiltonian. Despite this, we demonstrate that the system maintains SLP both before and after Alice’s measurement. This ensures that Bob cannot locally extract energy from the system in a consistent way. Instead, Alice communicates her measurement outcome to Bob, enabling him to perform conditional operations. These conditional operations allow Bob to extract energy, effectively performing the QET protocol without being limited by those constraints.
Additionally, the amount of energy that can be extracted using our new protocol is amplified to be 7.2 times higher than that of the original protocol, highlighting a significant advantage of the new protocol in retrieving otherwise unavailable energy.
Furthermore, we implement our new QET protocol on three available IBM quantum hardware backends. The results from all three backends demonstrate positive extracted energy for Bob, validating the feasibility of our protocol in experimental settings and confirming that the three previously considered constraints are not necessary. These successful implementations confirm the effectiveness of our new protocol, providing deeper insights into quantum energy teleportation and enabling its broader applications by removing unnecessary constraints.
In conclusion, our results suggest that the phenomenon of locked energy due to SLP extends beyond the systems initially anticipated by researchers. These locked energies, which cannot be locally extracted, limit our ability to leverage them for practical applications. However, our results show that these inaccessible energies can be unlocked and extracted using QET protocols with classical communications, making them available for future use.
The advantages of our results include the following:
First, it clarifies the key connection between QET and SLP.
Second, by relaxing previous constraints, it expands the broader applicability of QET.
Third, the introduction of the local effective Hamiltonian brings technical merits.
Fourth, our new QET protocol amplifies the amount of extracted energy—7.2 times more than that in the original protocol—thereby enhancing the power of QET.
Potential future directions include extending the current protocols to many-body systems, which would further broaden the applicability of our proposed concept of the “local effective Hamiltonian” in more complex quantum settings. Another promising direction is to explore practical applications of the extracted energy in various quantum systems—for example, in quantum chemistry, where such energy extraction could enable novel approaches to modeling chemical reactions. Pursuing these avenues may yield significant advances in both fundamental understanding and technological applications.