K. Hashimoto, B. Vacchini and C. Uchiyama
Lower bounds for the mean dissipated heat in an open quantum system
Phys. Rev. A 101
052114 (2020)
Abstract:
Landauer's principle provides a perspective on the
physical meaning of information as well as on the minimum working cost of
information processing. Whereas most studies have related the decrease in
entropy during a computationally irreversible process to a lower bound of
dissipated heat, recent efforts have also provided another lower bound
associated with the thermodynamic fluctuation of heat. The coexistence of
the two conceptually independent bounds has stimulated comparative studies
of their close relationship or tightness; however, these studies were
concerned with finite quantum systems that allowed the revival of erased
information because of a finite recurrence time. We broaden these
comparative studies further to open quantum systems with infinite
recurrence times. By examining their dependence on the initial state, we
find the independence of the thermodynamic bound from the initial
coherence, whereas the entropic bound depends on both the initial
coherence and population. A crucial role is indicated by the purity of the
initial state: the entropic bound is tighter when the initial condition is
sufficiently mixed, whereas the thermodynamic bound is tighter when the
initial state is close to a pure state. These trends are consistent with
previous results obtained for finite systems.