Quantum Thermodynamics: Emergence of Thermodynamic Behavior Within Composite Quantum Systems

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Springer Science & Business Media, Oct 21, 2009 - Science - 346 pages
Over the years enormous effort was invested in proving ergodicity, but for a number of reasons, con?dence in the fruitfulness of this approach has waned. — Y. Ben-Menahem and I. Pitowsky [1] Abstract The basic motivation behind the present text is threefold: To give a new explanation for the emergence of thermodynamics, to investigate the interplay between quantum mechanics and thermodynamics, and to explore possible ext- sions of the common validity range of thermodynamics. Originally, thermodynamics has been a purely phenomenological science. Early s- entists (Galileo, Santorio, Celsius, Fahrenheit) tried to give de?nitions for quantities which were intuitively obvious to the observer, like pressure or temperature, and studied their interconnections. The idea that these phenomena might be linked to other ?elds of physics, like classical mechanics, e.g., was not common in those days. Such a connection was basically introduced when Joule calculated the heat equ- alent in 1840 showing that heat was a form of energy, just like kinetic or potential energy in the theory of mechanics. At the end of the 19th century, when the atomic theory became popular, researchers began to think of a gas as a huge amount of bouncing balls inside a box.
 

Contents

Introduction
3
Basics of Thermodynamics and Statistics
23
Brief Review of Pertinent Concepts
41
The Program for the Foundation of Thermodynamics
64
Dynamics and Averages in Hilbert Space 77
76
Typicality of Observables and States
85
The Typical Reduced State of the System
107
Entanglement Correlations and Local Entropy
118
Brief Review of Relaxation and Transport Theories
190
Projection Operator Techniques and Hilbert Space Average Method
201
Finite Systems as Thermostats 215
214
Projective Approach to Dynamical Transport
227
Open System Approach to Transport
241
Purity and Local Entropy in Product Hilbert Space
257
Observability of Extensive Variables
275
Quantum Thermodynamic Processes
291

Generic Spectra of Large Systems
129
Temperature
139
Pressure and Adiabatic Processes
149
Quantum Mechanical and Classical State Densities 157
156
Equilibration in Model Systems
173
A Hyperspheres 315
314
Special Hilbert Space Averages and Variances 325
324
Power of a Function
333
Index
339
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