54 research outputs found
Work, heat and entropy production along quantum trajectories
Quantum open systems evolve according to completely positive, trace
preserving maps acting on the density operator, which can equivalently be
unraveled in term of so-called quantum trajectories. These stochastic sequences
of pure states correspond to the actual dynamics of the quantum system during
single realizations of an experiment in which the system's environment is
monitored. In this chapter, we present an extension of stochastic
thermodynamics to the case of open quantum systems, which builds on the analogy
between the quantum trajectories and the trajectories in phase space of
classical stochastic thermodynamics. We analyze entropy production, work and
heat exchanges at the trajectory level, identifying genuinely quantum
contributions due to decoherence induced by the environment. We present three
examples: the thermalization of a quantum system, the fluorescence of a driven
qubit and the continuous monitoring of a qubit's observable.Comment: Book chapter in 'Thermodynamics in the quantum regime - Recent
Progress and Outlook
Probing the state of a mechanical oscillator with an ultra-strongly coupled quantum emitter
We study the dynamics of a mechanical resonator parametrically coupled to a
driven dissipative quantum emitter in the ultra-strong coupling regime. We show
that this regime is fully compatible with a semi-classical treatment, and we
derive master equations for the emitter and the resonator. We show that the
fluctuations of the driven emitter's population induce the non-symmetrical
scattering of the mechanical quadratures. At long timescales, such scattering
back-acts on the emitter, which eventually decouples from the driving light.
This optical noise at the quantum limit is observable with state of the art
hybrid devices.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures. Comments are welcom
The role of quantum measurement in stochastic thermodynamics
This article sets up a new formalism to investigate stochastic thermodynamics
in the quantum regime, where stochasticity and irreversibility primarily come
from quantum measurement. In the absence of any bath, we define a purely
quantum component to heat exchange, that corresponds to energy fluctuations
caused by measurement back-action. Energetic and entropic signatures of
measurement induced irreversibility are then investigated for canonical
experiments of quantum optics, and the energetic cost of counter-acting
decoherence is characterized on a simple state-stabilizing protocol. By placing
quantum measurement in a central position, our formalism contributes to bridge
a gap between experimental quantum optics and quantum thermodynamics
Reversible work extraction in a hybrid opto-mechanical system
With the progress of nano-technology, thermodynamics also has to be scaled
down, calling for specific protocols to extract and measure work. Usually, such
protocols involve the action of an external, classical field (the battery) of
infinite energy, that controls the energy levels of a small quantum system (the
calorific fluid). Here we suggest a realistic device to reversibly extract work
in a battery of finite energy : a hybrid optomechanical system. Such devices
consist in an optically active two-level quantum system interacting strongly
with a nano-mechanical oscillator that provides and stores mechanical work,
playing the role of the battery. We identify protocols where the battery
exchanges large, measurable amounts of work with the quantum emitter without
getting entangled with it. When the quantum emitter is coupled to a thermal
bath, we show that thermodynamic reversibility is attainable with
state-of-the-art devices, paving the road towards the realization of a full
cycle of information-to-energy conversion at the single bit level.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figure
An autonomous quantum machine to measure the thermodynamic arrow of time
According to the Second Law of thermodynamics, the evolution of physical
systems has a preferred direction, that is characterized by some positive
entropy production. Here we propose a direct way to measure the stochastic
entropy produced while driving a quantum open system out of thermal
equilibrium. The driving work is provided by a quantum battery, the system and
the battery forming an autonomous machine. We show that the battery's energy
fluctuations equal work fluctuations and check Jarzynski's equality. Since
these energy fluctuations are measurable, the battery behaves as an embedded
quantum work meter and the machine verifies a generalized fluctuation theorem
involving the information encoded in the battery. Our proposal can be
implemented with state-of-the-art opto-mechanical systems. It paves the way
towards the experimental demonstration of fluctuation theorems in quantum open
systems.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figure
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