4,483 research outputs found
Fundamental Bounds on First Passage Time Fluctuations for Currents
Current is a characteristic feature of nonequilibrium systems. In stochastic
systems, these currents exhibit fluctuations constrained by the rate of
dissipation in accordance with the recently discovered thermodynamic
uncertainty relation. Here, we derive a conjugate uncertainty relationship for
the first passage time to accumulate a fixed net current. More generally, we
use the tools of large-deviation theory to simply connect current fluctuations
and first passage time fluctuations in the limit of long times and large
currents. With this connection, previously discovered symmetries and bounds on
the large-deviation function for currents are readily transferred to first
passage times.Comment: 7 pages including S
Proof of the Finite-Time Thermodynamic Uncertainty Relation for Steady-State Currents
The thermodynamic uncertainty relation offers a universal energetic
constraint on the relative magnitude of current fluctuations in nonequilibrium
steady states. However, it has only been derived for long observation times.
Here, we prove a recently conjectured finite-time thermodynamic uncertainty
relation for steady-state current fluctuations. Our proof is based on a
quadratic bound to the large deviation rate function for currents in the limit
of a large ensemble of many copies.Comment: 3 page
Reduction criterion for separability
We introduce a separability criterion based on the positive map Γ:ρ→(Tr ρ)-ρ, where ρ is a trace-class Hermitian operator. Any separable state is mapped by the tensor product of Γ and the identity into a non-negative operator, which provides a simple necessary condition for separability. This condition is generally not sufficient because it is vulnerable to the dilution of entanglement. In the special case where one subsystem is a quantum bit, Γ reduces to time reversal, so that this separability condition is equivalent to partial transposition. It is therefore also sufficient for 2×2 and 2×3 systems. Finally, a simple connection between this map for two qubits and complex conjugation in the “magic” basis [Phys. Rev. Lett. 78, 5022 (1997)] is displayed
Universal thermodynamic bounds on nonequilibrium response with biochemical applications
Diverse physical systems are characterized by their response to small
perturbations. Near thermodynamic equilibrium, the fluctuation-dissipation
theorem provides a powerful theoretical and experimental tool to determine the
nature of response by observing spontaneous equilibrium fluctuations. In this
spirit, we derive here a collection of equalities and inequalities valid
arbitrarily far from equilibrium that constrain the response of nonequilibrium
steady states in terms of the strength of nonequilibrium driving. Our work
opens new avenues for characterizing nonequilibrium response. As illustrations,
we show how our results rationalize the energetic requirements of two common
biochemical motifs.Comment: 21 pages, 15 figure
Efficiency and Large Deviations in Time-Asymmetric Stochastic Heat Engines
In a stochastic heat engine driven by a cyclic non-equilibrium protocol,
fluctuations in work and heat give rise to a fluctuating efficiency. Using
computer simulations and tools from large deviation theory, we have examined
these fluctuations in detail for a model two-state engine. We find in general
that the form of efficiency probability distributions is similar to those
described by Verley et al. [2014 Nat Comm, 5 4721], in particular featuring a
local minimum in the long-time limit. In contrast to the time-symmetric engine
protocols studied previously, however, this minimum need not occur at the value
characteristic of a reversible Carnot engine. Furthermore, while the local
minimum may reside at the global minimum of a large deviation rate function, it
does not generally correspond to the least likely efficiency measured over
finite time. We introduce a general approximation for the finite-time
efficiency distribution, , based on large deviation statistics of work
and heat, that remains very accurate even when deviates significantly
from its large deviation form.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figure
Near-optimal protocols in complex nonequilibrium transformations
The development of sophisticated experimental means to control nanoscale
systems has motivated efforts to design driving protocols which minimize the
energy dissipated to the environment. Computational models are a crucial tool
in this practical challenge. We describe a general method for sampling an
ensemble of finite-time, nonequilibrium protocols biased towards a low average
dissipation. We show that this scheme can be carried out very efficiently in
several limiting cases. As an application, we sample the ensemble of
low-dissipation protocols that invert the magnetization of a 2D Ising model and
explore how the diversity of the protocols varies in response to constraints on
the average dissipation. In this example, we find that there is a large set of
protocols with average dissipation close to the optimal value, which we argue
is a general phenomenon.Comment: 6 pages and 3 figures plus 4 pages and 5 figures of supplemental
materia
Effect of charged partons on black hole production at the Large Hadron Collider
The cross section for black hole production in hadron colliders is calculated
using a factorization hypothesis in which the parton-level process is
integrated over the parton density functions of the protons. The mass, spin,
charge, colour, and finite size of the partons are usually ignored. We examine
the effects of parton electric charge on black hole production using the
trapped-surface approach of general relativity. Accounting for electric charge
of the partons could reduce the black hole cross section by one to four orders
of magnitude at the Large Hadron Collider. The cross section results are
sensitive to the Standard Model brane thickness. Lower limits on the amount of
energy trapped behind the event horizon in the collision of charged particles
are also calculated.Comment: corrected typo in figure 1b; added some clarification in 3 places; 21
pages, 9 figures, JHEP3 forma
Teleportation with a uniformly accelerated partner
In this work, we give a description of the process of teleportation between
Alice in an inertial frame, and Rob who is in uniform acceleration with respect
to Alice. The fidelity of the teleportation is reduced due to Unruh radiation
in Rob's frame. In so far as teleportation is a measure of entanglement, our
results suggest that quantum entanglement is degraded in non inertial frames.Comment: 7 pages with 4 figures (in revtex4
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