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== Problem 3 ==
== Problem 3: Does entropy increase in quantum systems? ==
 
In classical Hamiltonian systems the nonequilibrium entropy
 
<math> S = -k_B \int \rho \n \rho </math>
 
is constant. In this problem we want to demonstrate that in microscopic evolution of an isolated quantum system, the entropy is also time independent, even
for general time-dependent density matrix <math> \hat{\rho} </math>. That is, using the equation of motion:

Revision as of 17:54, 16 February 2011

Problem 1

A researcher in spintronics is investigated two devices in order to generate spin-polarized currents. One of those devices has spins comprising the current described by the density matrix:


,


while the spins comprising the current in the other device are described by the density matrix


, where .


Here and are the eigenstates of the Pauli spin matrix :


.


What is the spin polarization of these two currents? Comment on the physical meaning of the difference between the spin state transported by two currents.

HINT: Compute the x, y, and z components of the spin polarization vector using both of these density matrices following the quantum-mechanical definition of an average value .


Problem 2

The Hamiltonian of a single spin in external magnetic field is given by (assuming that gyromagnetic ration is unity):

where is the vector of the Pauli matrices. Show that the equation of motion

for the density matrix of spin- discussed in the class

can be recast into the equation of motion for the spin-polarization (or Bloch) vector

since and are in one-to-one correspondence. Remember that

.


Problem 3: Does entropy increase in quantum systems?

In classical Hamiltonian systems the nonequilibrium entropy

Failed to parse (SVG with PNG fallback (MathML can be enabled via browser plugin): Invalid response ("Math extension cannot connect to Restbase.") from server "https://en.wikipedia.org/api/rest_v1/":): {\displaystyle S = -k_B \int \rho \n \rho }

is constant. In this problem we want to demonstrate that in microscopic evolution of an isolated quantum system, the entropy is also time independent, even for general time-dependent density matrix . That is, using the equation of motion: