This work is devoted to deriving the entropy of a single photon in a beam of light from first principles. Based on the quantum processes of light–matter interaction, we find that, if the light is not in equilibrium, there are two different ways, depending on whether the photon is being added or being removed from the light, of defining the single-photon entropy of this light. However, when the light is in equilibrium at temperature T, the two definitions are equivalent and the photon entropy of this light is hν/T. From first principles, we also re-derive the Jüttner velocity distribution showing that, even without interatomic collisions, two-level atoms will relax to the state satisfying the Maxwell–Jüttner velocity distribution when they are moving in blackbody radiation fields.
This work is devoted to deriving a more accurate reaction–diffusion equation for an A/B binary system by summing over microscopic trajectories. By noting that an originally simple physical trajectory might be much more complicated when the reactions are incorporated, we introduce diffusion–reaction–diffusion (DRD) diagrams, similar to the Feynman diagram, to derive the equation. It is found that when there is no intermolecular interaction between A and B, the newly derived equation is reduced to the classical reaction–diffusion equation. However, when there is intermolecular interaction, the newly derived equation shows that there are coupling terms between the diffusion and the reaction, which will be manifested on the mesoscopic scale. The DRD diagram method can be also applied to derive a more accurate dynamical equation for the description of chemical reactions occurred in polymeric systems, such as polymerizations, since the diffusion and the reaction may couple more deeply than that of small molecules.
In this work, we systematically study an immiscible binary system undergoing thermal/photo reversible reactions in theory. For the thermal reaction case, no dissipative structures can be formed and only uniform...
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