Gibbs mixing of partially distinguishable photons with a polarising beamsplitter membrane

For a thought experiment concerning the mixing of two classical gases, Gibbs concluded that the work that can be extracted from mixing is determined by whether or not the gases can be distinguished by a semi-permeable membrane; that is, the mixing work is a discontinuous function of how similar the...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inNew journal of physics Vol. 22; no. 11; pp. 113015 - 113029
Main Authors Holmes, Zoë, Mintert, Florian, Anders, Janet
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Bristol IOP Publishing 01.11.2020
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Summary:For a thought experiment concerning the mixing of two classical gases, Gibbs concluded that the work that can be extracted from mixing is determined by whether or not the gases can be distinguished by a semi-permeable membrane; that is, the mixing work is a discontinuous function of how similar the gases are. Here we describe an optomechanical setup that generalises Gibbs' thought experiment to partially distinguishable quantum gases. Specifically, we model the interaction between a polarisation dependent beamsplitter, that plays the role of a semi-permeable membrane, and two photon gases of non-orthogonal polarisation. We find that the work arising from the mixing of the gases is related to the potential energy associated with the displacement of the microscopic membrane, and we derive a general quantum mixing work expression, valid for any two photon gases with the same number distribution. The quantum mixing work is found to change continuously with the distinguishability of the two polarised gases. In addition, fluctuations of the work on the microscopic membrane become important, which we calculate for Fock and thermal states of the photon gases. Our findings generalise Gibbs' mixing to the quantum regime and open the door for new quantum thermodynamic (thought) experiments with quantum gases with non-orthogonal polarisations and microscopic pistons that can distinguish orthogonal polarisations.
Bibliography:NJP-112184.R2
LA-UR-20-24489
Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC)
USDOE National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA)
89233218CNA000001; EP/M009165/1; EP/R045577/1; EP/S000755/1
ISSN:1367-2630
1367-2630
DOI:10.1088/1367-2630/abc602