The use of the von Neumann entropy in formulating the laws of thermodynamics has recently been challenged. It is associated with the average work whereas the work guaranteed to be extracted in any single run of an experiment is the more interesting quantity in general. We show that an expression that quantifies majorization determines the optimal guaranteed work. We argue it should therefore be the central quantity of statistical mechanics, rather than the von Neumann entropy. In the limit of many identical and independent subsystems (asymptotic i.i.d) the von Neumann entropy expressions are recovered but in the non-equilbrium regime the optimal guaranteed work can be radically different to the optimal average. Moreover our measure of major...
What does it mean for one quantum process to be more disordered than another? Interestingly, this ap...
The lack of knowledge that an observer has about a system limits the amount of work it can extract. ...
Abstract Von Neumann (1932, Ch. 5) argued by means of a thought experiment involving measurements of...
A collection of recent papers revisit how to quantify the relationship between information and work ...
A collection of recent papers revisit how to quantify the relationship between information and work ...
Thermodynamics describes large-scale, slowly evolving systems. Two modern approaches generalize ther...
Thermodynamics describes large-scale, slowly evolving systems. Two modern approaches generalize ther...
Abstract In this paper we show how the Shannon entropy is connected to the theory of majorization. T...
this article the emphasis is put on von Neumann and on quantum mechanics. The selection of the subje...
All teachers and students of physics have absorbed the doctrine that probability must be normalized....
<p>All teachers and students of physics have absorbed the doctrine that probability must be normaliz...
Fluctuation-dissipation relations, such as Crooks ’ Theorem and Jarzynski’s Equality, are power-ful ...
The von Neumann entropy is a key quantity in quantum information theory and, roughly speaking, quant...
The quantum entropy is usually defined using von Neumann's formula, which measures lack of informati...
The lack of knowledge that an observer has about a system limits the amount of work it can extract. ...
What does it mean for one quantum process to be more disordered than another? Interestingly, this ap...
The lack of knowledge that an observer has about a system limits the amount of work it can extract. ...
Abstract Von Neumann (1932, Ch. 5) argued by means of a thought experiment involving measurements of...
A collection of recent papers revisit how to quantify the relationship between information and work ...
A collection of recent papers revisit how to quantify the relationship between information and work ...
Thermodynamics describes large-scale, slowly evolving systems. Two modern approaches generalize ther...
Thermodynamics describes large-scale, slowly evolving systems. Two modern approaches generalize ther...
Abstract In this paper we show how the Shannon entropy is connected to the theory of majorization. T...
this article the emphasis is put on von Neumann and on quantum mechanics. The selection of the subje...
All teachers and students of physics have absorbed the doctrine that probability must be normalized....
<p>All teachers and students of physics have absorbed the doctrine that probability must be normaliz...
Fluctuation-dissipation relations, such as Crooks ’ Theorem and Jarzynski’s Equality, are power-ful ...
The von Neumann entropy is a key quantity in quantum information theory and, roughly speaking, quant...
The quantum entropy is usually defined using von Neumann's formula, which measures lack of informati...
The lack of knowledge that an observer has about a system limits the amount of work it can extract. ...
What does it mean for one quantum process to be more disordered than another? Interestingly, this ap...
The lack of knowledge that an observer has about a system limits the amount of work it can extract. ...
Abstract Von Neumann (1932, Ch. 5) argued by means of a thought experiment involving measurements of...