Gabriel Landi

University of São Paulo

ZOOM LINK TO JOIN IN: http://s.ic.fo/QTD_GabrielLandi

Tuesday Oct 20, 2020 / 14:00-15:00 CEST

Thermodynamics of continuously measured quantum systems

Irreversibility is intimately related to ignorance. The more one knows about a physical process, the more reversible it is. The 2nd law of hermodynamics should therefore also take into account the amount of information acquired by the experimenter. In the quantum domain, however, this discussion becomes more delicate since measurements are inevitably invasive. In this talk I discuss recent results on the description of the 2nd law for continuously monitored bosonic systems [1]. Our approach is based on the use of quantum phase space techniques to characterize the thermodynamics, as first put forth in [2, 3]. Combining this with the framework of weak continuous measurements and stochastic master equations, we show that it is possible to construct a conditional 2nd law, given the measurement records. Moreover, we show that the diference between the conditional and unconditional 2nd laws is directly associated with the integrated information gained from the measurement records. Finally, I discuss a recent experimental assessment of this principle in an optomechanical system [4], where conditional and unconditional thermodynamic quantities were obtained at the single-trajectory level. Particularly interesting, we discuss the notion of an informational steady-state, where the act of continuously acquiring information keeps the system away from equilibrium, in a non-equilibrium steady-state.

gtlandi@if.usp.br
[1] A. Belenchia, L. Mancino, G. T. Landi, and M. Paternostro, accepted in Nature Quantum Information (2019), arXiv:1908.09382.
[2] J. P. Santos, G. T. Landi, and M. Paternostro, Physical Review Letters 118, 220601 (2017), ArXiv:1706.01145.
[3] M. Brunelli, L. Fusco, R. Landig, W. Wieczorek, J. Hoelscher- Obermaier, G. Landi, F. L. Semi˜ao, A. Ferraro, N. Kiesel, T. Donner, G. De Chiara, and M. Paternostro, Physical Review Letters 121, 160604 (2018), arXiv:1602.06958.
[4] M. Rossi, L. Mancino, G. T. Landi, M. Paternostro, A. Schliesser, and A. Belenchia, Physical Review Letters 125, 080601 (2020), arXiv:2005.03429.