Thermodynamics of quantum measurements
Abstract: Quantum measurement of a system can change its mean energy, as well as entropy. A selective measurement (classical or quantum) can be used as a "Maxwell's demon" to power a single-temperature heat engine, by decreasing the entropy. Quantum mechanically, so can a non-selective measurement, despite increasing the entropy of a thermal state. The maximal amount of work extractable following the measurement is given by the change in free energy: $W_{max}{(non-)sel.}=\Delta E_{meas}-T_{Bath}\Delta S_{meas}{(non-)sel.}$. This follows from the "generalized 2nd law for nonequilibrium initial state" [Hasegawa et. al, PLA (2010)], of which an elementary reduction to the standard law is given here. It is shown that $W_{max}{sel.}-W_{max}{non-sel.}$ equals the work required to reset the memory of the measuring device, and that no such resetting is needed in the non-selective case. Consequently, a single-bath engine powered by either kind of measurement works at a net loss of $T_{Bath}\Delta S_{meas}{non-sel}$ per cycle. By replacing the measurement by a reversible "premeasurement" and allowing a work source to couple to the system and memory, the cycle can be made completely reversible.
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