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Optimal Control to Minimize Dissipation and Fluctuations in Open Quantum Systems Beyond Slow and Rapid Regimes

Yuki Kurokawa, Yoshihiko Hasegawa·February 2, 2026
Quantum Physics

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Abstract

Optimal control is a central problem in quantum thermodynamics. When minimizing dissipated work and work fluctuations defined via the two-point measurement scheme in open quantum systems, existing approaches largely focus on the rapid- and slow-driving limits, leaving the behavior at intermediate timescales elusive. In this work, by numerically optimizing the driving protocols, we demonstrate that the open quantum systems exhibit distinct optimal structures not captured by the conventional limits. Specifically, in the coherent spin-boson model, we find that the optimal protocol switches discontinuously between distinct locally optimal solutions as the relative weight between dissipation and fluctuations is varied. Furthermore, for a single-level quantum dot coupled to a fermionic reservoir, the optimized protocol develops a characteristic multi-step structure.

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