English

Temperature in Nonequilibrium Quantum Systems

Quantum Physics 2021-05-26 v1

Abstract

We extend on ideas from standard thermodynamics to show that temperature can be assigned to a general nonequilibrium quantum system. By choosing a physically motivated complete set of observables and expanding the system state thereupon, one can read a set of relevant, independent thermodynamic variables which include internal energy. This expansion allows us to read a nonequilibrium temperature as the partial derivative of the von Neumann entropy with respect to internal energy. We show that this definition of temperature is one of a set of thermodynamics parameters unambiguously describing the system state. It has appealing features such as positivity for passive states and consistency with the standard temperature for thermal states. By attributing temperature to correlations in a bipartite system, we obtain a universal relation which connects the temperatures of subsystems, total system as a whole, and correlation. All these temperatures can be different even when the composite system is in a well-defined Gibbsian thermal state.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2105.11915,
  title  = {Temperature in Nonequilibrium Quantum Systems},
  author = {S. Alipour and F. Benatti and M. Afsary and F. Bakhshinezhad and M. Ramezani and T. Ala-Nissila and A. T. Rezakhani},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2105.11915},
  year   = {2021}
}

Comments

4+8 pages

R2 v1 2026-06-24T02:26:51.415Z