42 research outputs found
Mass-Enhanced Fermi Liquid Ground State in NaCoO
Magnetic, transport, and specific heat measurements have been performed on
layered metallic oxide NaCoO as a function of temperature .
Below a characteristic temperature =3040 K, electrical resistivity
shows a metallic conductivity with a behavior and magnetic susceptibility
deviates from the Curie-Weiss behavior showing a broad peak at 14 K. The
electronic specific heat coefficient is 60 mJ/molK at 2 K.
No evidence for magnetic ordering is found. These behaviors suggest the
formation of mass-enhanced Fermi liquid ground state analogous to that in
-electron heavy fermion compound LiVO.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, to be published in Phys. Rev. B 69 (2004
Iterative Methods of Tikhonov-Phillips Image Reconstruction of Large Size with a Nonlinear Constraint
Quantum Fluctuation Theorems
Recent advances in experimental techniques allow one to measure and control
systems at the level of single molecules and atoms. Here gaining information
about fluctuating thermodynamic quantities is crucial for understanding
nonequilibrium thermodynamic behavior of small systems. To achieve this aim,
stochastic thermodynamics offers a theoretical framework, and nonequilibrium
equalities such as Jarzynski equality and fluctuation theorems provide key
information about the fluctuating thermodynamic quantities. We review the
recent progress in quantum fluctuation theorems, including the studies of
Maxwell's demon which plays a crucial role in connecting thermodynamics with
information.Comment: As a chapter of: F. Binder, L. A. Correa, C. Gogolin, J. Anders, and
G. Adesso (eds.), "Thermodynamics in the quantum regime - Fundamental Aspects
and New Directions", (Springer International Publishing, 2018
Second law, entropy production, and reversibility in thermodynamics of information
We present a pedagogical review of the fundamental concepts in thermodynamics
of information, by focusing on the second law of thermodynamics and the entropy
production. Especially, we discuss the relationship among thermodynamic
reversibility, logical reversibility, and heat emission in the context of the
Landauer principle and clarify that these three concepts are fundamentally
distinct to each other. We also discuss thermodynamics of measurement and
feedback control by Maxwell's demon. We clarify that the demon and the second
law are indeed consistent in the measurement and the feedback processes
individually, by including the mutual information to the entropy production.Comment: 43 pages, 10 figures. As a chapter of: G. Snider et al. (eds.),
"Energy Limits in Computation: A Review of Landauer's Principle, Theory and
Experiments
Quantum Jarzynski-Sagawa-Ueda relations
We consider a (small) quantum mechanical system which is operated by an
external agent, who changes the Hamiltonian of the system according to a fixed
scenario. In particular we assume that the agent (who may be called a demon)
performs measurement followed by feedback, i.e., it makes a measurement of the
system and changes the protocol according to the outcome. We extend to this
setting the generalized Jarzynski relations, recently derived by Sagawa and
Ueda for classical systems with feedback. One of the two relations by Sagawa
and Ueda is derived here in error-free quantum processes, while the other is
derived only when the measurement process involves classical errors. The first
relation leads to a second law which takes into account the efficiency of the
feedback.Comment: 11 pages. a major revision in v.2. Minor revision in v.3. The present
version will appear in J. Stat. Phy
Quantum Jarzynski Equality with multiple measurement and feedback for isolated system
In this paper, we derive the Jarzynski equality (JE) for an isolated quantum
system in three different cases: (i) the full evolution is unitary with no
intermediate measurements, (ii) with intermediate measurements of arbitrary
observables being performed, and (iii) with intermediate measurements whose
outcomes are used to modify the external protocol (feedback). We assume that
the measurements will involve errors that are purely classical in nature. Our
treatment is based on path probability in state space for each realization.
This is in contrast to the formal approach based on projection operator and
density matrices. We find that the JE remains unaffected in the second case,
but gets modified in the third case where the mutual information between the
measured values with the actual eigenvalues must be incorporated into the
relation.Comment: 7 page
Optoelectronic integration for high-performance computing and communication
For high-performance computing and communication, the availability of gigabit-per-second optical links would offer a tremendous improvement over the ten megabit-per-second optical links offered by present-day Ethernet systems.</jats:p
