Quantum thermodynamics can be cast as a resource theory by considering free
access to a heat bath, thereby viewing the Gibbs state at a fixed temperature
as a free state and hence any other state as a resource. Here, we consider a
multipartite scenario where several parties attempt at extracting work locally,
each having access to a local heat bath (possibly with a different
temperature), assisted with an energy-preserving global unitary. As a specific
model, we analyze a collection of harmonic oscillators or a multimode bosonic
system. Focusing on the Gaussian paradigm, we construct a reasonable resource
theory of local activity for a multimode bosonic system, where we identify as
free any state that is obtained from a product of thermal states (possibly at
different temperatures) acted upon by any linear-optics (passive Gaussian)
transformation. The associated free operations are then all linear-optics
transformations supplemented with tensoring and partial tracing. We show that
the local Gaussian extractable work (if each party applies a Gaussian unitary,
assisted with linear optics) is zero if and only if the covariance matrix of
the system is that of a free state. Further, we develop a resource theory of
local Gaussian extractable work, defined as the difference between the trace
and symplectic trace of the covariance matrix of the system. We prove that it
is a resource monotone that cannot increase under free operations. We also
provide examples illustrating the distillation of local activity and local
Gaussian extractable work.Comment: 22 pages, 5 figures, minor corrections to make it close to the
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