Nonequilibrium thermodynamics and power generation in open quantum optomechanical systems
Paulo J. Paulino, Igor Lesanovsky, Federico Carollo

TL;DR
This paper develops a thermodynamic framework for open quantum optomechanical systems, enabling the analysis of energy conversion, efficiency, and collective phenomena in nonequilibrium conditions, with applications to quantum engines like time-crystal engines.
Contribution
It introduces a consistent thermodynamic description for nonequilibrium open quantum cavity-atom systems, accounting for dissipative heat currents and phase transitions, and defines two thermodynamic limits for analysis.
Findings
Identification of persistent heat currents in nonequilibrium systems
Analysis of power and efficiency in quantum engine models
Observation of metastable behavior and phase transitions
Abstract
Cavity optomechanical systems are a paradigmatic setting for the conversion of electromagnetic energy into mechanical work. Experiments with atoms coupled to cavity modes are realized in nonequilibrium conditions, described by phenomenological models encoding non-thermal dissipative dynamics and falling outside the framework of weak system-bath couplings. This fact makes their interpretation as quantum engines, e.g., the derivation of a well-defined efficiency, quite challenging. Here, we present a consistent thermodynamic description of open quantum cavity-atom systems. Our approach takes advantage of their nonequilibrium nature and arrives at an energetic balance which is fully interpretable in terms of persistent dissipated heat currents. The interaction between atoms and cavity modes can further give rise to nonequilibrium phase transitions and emergent behavior and allows to assess…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics · Mechanical and Optical Resonators · Photoreceptor and optogenetics research
