English

Microscopic diagonal entropy and its connection to basic thermodynamic relations

Statistical Mechanics 2012-08-10 v8 High Energy Physics - Theory Quantum Physics

Abstract

We define a diagonal entropy (d-entropy) for an arbitrary Hamiltonian system as Sd=nρnnlnρnnS_d=-\sum_n \rho_{nn}\ln \rho_{nn} with the sum taken over the basis of instantaneous energy states. In equilibrium this entropy coincides with the conventional von Neumann entropy Sn=TrρlnρS_n=-{\rm Tr}\, \rho\ln\rho. However, in contrast to SnS_n, the d-entropy is not conserved in time in closed Hamiltonian systems. If the system is initially in stationary state then in accord with the second law of thermodynamics the d-entropy can only increase or stay the same. We also show that the d-entropy can be expressed through the energy distribution function and thus it is measurable, at least in principle. Under very generic assumptions of the locality of the Hamiltonian and non-integrability the d-entropy becomes a unique function of the average energy in large systems and automatically satisfies the fundamental thermodynamic relation. This relation reduces to the first law of thermodynamics for quasi-static processes. The d-entropy is also automatically conserved for adiabatic processes. We illustrate our results with explicit examples and show that SdS_d behaves consistently with expectations from thermodynamics.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0806.2862,
  title  = {Microscopic diagonal entropy and its connection to basic thermodynamic relations},
  author = {Anatoli Polkovnikov},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0806.2862},
  year   = {2012}
}

Comments

revised and expanded as published, clarified common misconceptions about additivity of the entropy

R2 v1 2026-06-21T10:51:39.873Z