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