The Brownian motion of a harmonically bound quantum particle and coupled to a
harmonic quantum bath is exactly solvable. At low enough temperatures the
stationary state is non-Gibbsian due to an entanglement with the bath. This
happens when a cloud of bath modes around the particle is formed. Equilibrium
thermodynamics for particle plus bath together, does not imply standard
thermodynamics for the particle itself at low T. Various formulations of the
second law are then invalid. First, the Clausius inequality can be violated.
Second, when the width of the confining potential is suddenly changed, there
occurs a relaxation to equilibrium during which the rate of entropy production
is partly negative. Third, for non-adiabatic changes of system parameters the
rate of energy dissipation can be negative, and, out of equilibrium, cyclic
processes are possible which extract work from the bath. Conditions are put
forward under which perpetuum mobile of the second kind, having several work
extraction cycles, enter the realm of condensed matter physics.Comment: 6 pages Latex, uses aip-proceedings style files. Proceedings `Quantum
Limits to the Second Law', San Diego, July 200