4,161 research outputs found

    Entropy production and time-asymmetry in the presence of strong interactions

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    It is known that the equilibrium properties of open classical systems that are strongly coupled to a heat bath are described by a set of thermodynamic potentials related to the system's Hamiltonian of mean force. By adapting this framework to a more general class of non-equilibrium states, we show that the equilibrium properties of the bath can be well-defined, even when the system is arbitrarily far from equilibrium and correlated with the bath. These states, which retain a notion of temperature, take the form of conditional equilibrium distributions. For out-of-equilibrium processes we show that the average entropy production quantifies the extent to which the system-bath state is driven away from the conditional equilibrium distribution. In addition, we show that the stochastic entropy production satisfies a generalised Crooks relation and can be used to quantify time-asymmetry of correlated non-equilibrium processes. These results naturally extend the familiar properties of entropy production in weakly-coupled systems to the strong coupling regime. Experimental measurements of the entropy production at strong coupling could be pursued using optomechanics or trapped ion systems, which allow strong coupling to be engineered.Comment: 8 pages, 1 figure, comments welcom

    Leggett-Garg inequalities for quantum fluctuating work

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    The Leggett-Garg inequalities serve to test whether or not quantum correlations in time can be explained within a classical macrorealistic framework. We apply this test to thermodynamics and derive a set of Leggett- Garg inequalities for the statistics of fluctuating work done on a quantum system unitarily driven in time. It is shown that these inequalities can be violated in a driven two-level system, thereby demonstrating that there exists no general macrorealistic description of quantum work. These violations are shown to emerge within the standard Two-Projective-Measurement scheme as well as for alternative definitions of fluctuating work that are based on weak measurement. Our results elucidate the influences of temporal correlations on work extraction in the quantum regime and highlight a key difference between quantum and classical thermodynamics.Comment: v2, 1 figure, accepted version to appear in Entropy (Special Issue on "Quantum Thermodynamics II"

    Time-reversal symmetric work distributions for closed quantum dynamics in the histories framework

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    A central topic in the emerging field of quantum thermodynamics is the definition of thermodynamic work in the quantum regime. One widely used solution is to define work for a closed system undergoing non-equilibrium dynamics according to the two-point energy measurement scheme. However, due to the invasive nature of measurement the two-point quantum work probability distribution leads to inconsistencies with two pillars of thermodynamics: it breaks the first law and the time-reversal symmetry expected for closed dynamics. We here introduce the quantum histories framework as a method to characterise the thermodynamic properties of the unmeasured, closed dynamics. Extending the classical phase space trajectories to continuous power operator trajectories allows us to derive an alternative quantum work distribution for closed quantum dynamics that fulfils the first law and is time-reversal symmetric. We find that the work distribution of the unmeasured dynamics leads to deviations from the classical Jarzynski equality and can have negative values highlighting distinctly non-classical features of quantum work.Comment: 18 pages, 2 figures, comments welcom

    Alien Registration- Miller, Harry (Presque Isle, Aroostook County)

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    https://digitalmaine.com/alien_docs/33773/thumbnail.jp

    An Autopsy Series on Fatal Pulmonary Embolism at Grace-New Haven Hospital, with Experimental Work on the Production and Removal of Pulmonary Emboli in Dogs

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    [From the Purpose] The purpose of this study is to investigate the occurrence of fatal pulmonary embolism in patients coming to autopsy in the New Haven Hospital during the eighteen year period from 1935 to 1953, inclusive; and to explore briefly the historical, clinical, and experimental basis for the attempt to remove surgically emboli from the pulmonary artery (Trendelenberg Operation)

    The Lost Art of Cross-Examination by Jacob W. Ehrlich

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