Absolute irreversibility and continuous quantum measurement: a fluctuation theorem perspective
ORAL
Abstract
The out-of-equilibrium fluctuations of thermodynamic quantities like entropy production for a small system in contact with a thermal reservoir are constrained beyond the second law using relations known as fluctuation theorems. Here we show that, in the absence of a thermal reservoir, the dynamics of continuously measured quantum systems can also be described by a fluctuation theorem, where the fluctuations originate from inherently probabilistic quantum measurement dynamics. This theorem captures the emergence of an arrow of time in the measurement process, from microscopically reversible quantum state dynamics in continuous quantum measurements. We also demonstrate that the measurement-induced wave-function collapse exhibits absolute irreversibility, such that Jarzynski and Crooks-like equalities are violated. We apply our results to different continuous measurement schemes on a qubit: dispersive measurement, homodyne and heterodyne detection of qubit's fluorescence.
*This work was supported by the John Templeton Foundation Grant ID 58558, the US Army Research Office grant No. W911NF-15-1-0496, the National Science Foundation grants No. DMR-1506081 and NSF PHY-1748958, and the US Department of Energy grant No. DE-SC0017890
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Presenters
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Sreenath Kizhakkumpurath Manikandan
- Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Rochester