In thermodynamics a macroscopic state of a system results from a number of
its microscopic states. This number is given by the exponent of the system's
entropy exp(S). In non-interacting systems with discrete energy spectra,
such as large scale quantum dots, S as a function of the temperature has
usually a plateau shape with integer values of exp(S) on these plateaus.
Plateaus with non-integer values of exp(S) are fundamentally forbidden and
would be thermodynamically infeasible. Here we investigate the entropy of a
non-interacting quantum dot coupled via tunneling to normal metals with
continuum spectra as well as to topological superconductors. We show that the
entropy may have non-integer plateaus if the topological superconductors
support weakly overlapping Majorana bound states. This brings a fundamental
change in the thermodynamics of the quantum dot whose specific heat cV
acquires low temperature Majorana peaks which should be absent according to the
conventional thermodynamics. We also provide a fundamental thermodynamic
understanding of the transport properties, such as the linear conductance. In
general our results show that the thermodynamics of systems coupled to Majorana
modes represents a fundamental physical interest with diverse applications
depending on versatility of possible coupling mechanisms.Comment: 8 pages, 11 figure