room 1.03, Pasteura 5 at 11:15

Kamil Korzekwa (UJ Kraków)
The Seminar will take a HYBRID form. It will take place in room 1.03 but will be simmultaneously tranmitted via ZOOM under the following link: https://zoom.us/j/92894130767 (Passcode: R6Vx6E).
The necessity to go beyond classical thermodynamics is usually motivated by the fact that at the nanoscale quantum effects, like coherence and entanglement, start playing an important role. However, in the quantum regime one also deals with systems composed of a finite number $n$ of particles, whereas the theory of thermodynamics is traditionally constrained to the study of macroscopic systems with $n\to\infty$, whose energy fluctuations are negligible compared to their average energy. In this talk I will address this problem and describe recent developments allowing one to go beyond the thermodynamic limit and rigorously investigate thermodynamic transformations of finite-size systems. I will explain why such transformations are generally irreversible and consume free energy, and how this affects the performance of thermodynamic protocols [1]. A new version of the famous fluctuation-dissipation theorem will also be presented, linking the minimal amount of free energy dissipated in the process to the amount of free energy fluctuations present in the system’s initial state [2]. Moreover, I will discuss a novel resource resonance phenomenon, which allows one to significantly reduce dissipation for transformations between states whose fluctuations are properly tuned [3,4]. Finally, I will also explain how quantum coherence may bring states closer to resonance effectively decreasing the dissipation of free energy [5].
[1] Quantum 2, 108 (2018).
[2] Phys. Rev. E 105, 054127 (2022).
[3] Phys. Rev. A 99, 032332 (2019).
[4] Phys. Rev. Lett. 122, 110403 (2019).
[5] In preparation (arXiv 2022).
room 1.03, Pasteura 5 at 11:15

Sagnik Chakraborty (UMK, Toruń)
The Seminar will take a HYBRID form. It will take place in room 1.03 but will be simmultaneously tranmitted via ZOOM under the following link: https://zoom.us/j/92894130767 (Passcode: R6Vx6E).
We discuss a model of a closed quantum evolution of two-qubits where the joint Hamiltonian is so chosen that one of the qubits acts as a bath and thermalize the other qubit which is acting as the system. The corresponding exact master equation for the system is derived. Interestingly, for a specific choice of parameters the master equation takes the Gorini-Kossakowski-LindbladSudarshan (GKLS) form with constant coefficients, representing pumping and damping of a single qubit system. Based on this model we construct an Otto cycle connected to a single qubit bath and study its thermodynamic properties. Our analysis goes beyond the conventional weak coupling scenario and illustrates the effects of finite bath including non-Markovianity. We find closed form expressions for efficiency (coefficient of performance), power (cooling power) for heat engine regime (refrigerator regime) for different modifications of the joint Hamiltonian.
Ref: arXiv:2206.14751