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Nonequilibrium and Irreversibility 2014 ed. [Kõva köide]

  • Formaat: Hardback, 248 pages, kõrgus x laius: 235x155 mm, kaal: 5207 g, 24 Illustrations, black and white, 1 Hardback
  • Sari: Theoretical and Mathematical Physics
  • Ilmumisaeg: 01-Jul-2014
  • Kirjastus: Springer International Publishing AG
  • ISBN-10: 3319067575
  • ISBN-13: 9783319067575
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  • Formaat: Hardback, 248 pages, kõrgus x laius: 235x155 mm, kaal: 5207 g, 24 Illustrations, black and white, 1 Hardback
  • Sari: Theoretical and Mathematical Physics
  • Ilmumisaeg: 01-Jul-2014
  • Kirjastus: Springer International Publishing AG
  • ISBN-10: 3319067575
  • ISBN-13: 9783319067575

This book concentrates on the properties of the stationary states in chaotic systems of particles or fluids, leaving aside the theory of the way they can be reached. The stationary states of particles or of fluids (understood as probability distributions on microscopic configurations or on the fields describing continua) have received important new ideas and data from numerical simulations and reviews are needed. The starting point is to find out which time invariant distributions come into play in physics. A special feature of this book is the historical approach. To identify the problems the author analyzes the papers of the founding fathers Boltzmann, Clausius and Maxwell including translations of the relevant (parts of) historical documents. He also establishes a close link between treatment of irreversible phenomena in statistical mechanics and the theory of chaotic systems at and beyond the onset of turbulence as developed by Sinai, Ruelle, Bowen (SRB) and others: the author gives arguments intending to support strongly the viewpoint that stationary states in or out of equilibrium can be described in a unified way. In this book it is the "chaotic hypothesis", which can be seen as an extension of the classical ergodic hypothesis to non equilibrium phenomena, that plays the central role. It is shown that SRB - often considered as a kind of mathematical playground with no impact on physical reality - has indeed a sound physical interpretation; an observation which to many might be new and a very welcome insight. Following this, many consequences of the chaotic hypothesis are analyzed in chapter 3 - 4 and in chapter 5 a few applications are proposed. Chapter 6 is historical: carefully analyzing the old literature on the subject, especially ergodic theory and its relevance for statistical mechanics; an approach which gives the book a very personal touch. The book contains an extensive coverage of current research (partly from the authors and his coauthors publications) presented in enough detail so that advanced students may get the flavor of a direction of research in a field which is still very much alive and progressing. Proofs of theorems are usually limited to heuristic sketches privileging the presentation of the ideas and providing references that the reader can follow, so that in this way an overload of this text with technical details could be avoided.

1 Equilibrium
1(22)
1.1 Many Particles Systems: Kinematics, Timing
1(2)
1.2 Birth of Kinetic Theory
3(3)
1.3 Heat Theorem and Ergodic Hypothesis
6(3)
1.4 Least Action and Heat Theorem
9(3)
1.5 Heat Theorem and Ensembles
12(3)
1.6 Boltzmann's Equation, Entropy, Loschmidt's Paradox
15(4)
1.7 Conclusion
19(4)
References
20(3)
2 Stationary Nonequilibrium
23(22)
2.1 Thermostats and Infinite Models
23(2)
2.2 Finite Thermostats
25(2)
2.3 Examples of Nonequilibrium Problems
27(2)
2.4 Initial Data
29(3)
2.5 Finite or Infinite Thermostats? Equivalence?
32(2)
2.6 SRB Distributions
34(2)
2.7 Chaotic Hypothesis
36(1)
2.8 Phase Space Contraction in Continuous Time
37(3)
2.9 Phase Space Contraction in Timed Observations
40(2)
2.10 Conclusions
42(3)
References
43(2)
3 Discrete Phase Space
45(24)
3.1 Recurrence
45(2)
3.2 Hyperbolicity: Stable and Unstable Manifolds
47(2)
3.3 Geometric Aspects of Hyperbolicity: Rectangles
49(2)
3.4 Symbolic Dynamics and Chaos
51(3)
3.5 Examples of Hyperbolic Symbolic Dynamics
54(1)
3.6 Coarse Graining and Discrete Phase Space
55(2)
3.7 Coarse Cells, Phase Space Points and Simulations
57(2)
3.8 The SRB Distribution: Its Physical Meaning
59(2)
3.9 Other Stationary Distributions
61(1)
3.10 Phase Space Cells and Entropy
62(2)
3.11 Counting Phase Space Cells Out of Equilibrium
64(2)
3.12 kB log N: Entropy or Lyapunov Function?
66(3)
References
67(2)
4 Fluctuations
69(30)
4.1 SRB Potentials
69(2)
4.2 Chaos and Markov Processes
71(2)
4.3 Symmetries and Time Reversal
73(2)
4.4 Pairing Rule and Axiom C
75(3)
4.5 Large Deviations
78(1)
4.6 Time Reversal and Fluctuation Theorem
79(3)
4.7 Fluctuation Patterns
82(2)
4.8 Onsager Reciprocity, Green-Kubo Formula, Fluctuation Theorem
84(2)
4.9 Local Fluctuations: An Example
86(2)
4.10 Local Fluctuations: Generalities
88(2)
4.11 Quantum Systems, Thermostats and Nonequilibrium
90(3)
4.12 Quantum Adiabatic Approximation and Alternatives
93(6)
References
95(4)
5 Applications
99(32)
5.1 Equivalent Thermostats
99(2)
5.2 Granular Materials and Friction
101(3)
5.3 Neglecting Granular Friction: The Relevant Time Scales
104(2)
5.4 Simulations for Granular Materials
106(2)
5.5 Fluids
108(3)
5.6 Developed Turbulence
111(1)
5.7 Intermittency
112(4)
5.8 Stochastic Evolutions
116(2)
5.9 Very Large Fluctuations
118(2)
5.10 Thermometry
120(2)
5.11 Processes Time Scale and Irreversibility
122(9)
References
128(3)
6 Historical Comments
131(70)
6.1 Proof of the Second Fundamental Theorem
131(10)
6.2 Collision Analysis and Equipartition
141(9)
6.3 Dense Orbits: An Example
150(1)
6.4 Clausius' Version of Recurrence and Periodicity
151(1)
6.5 Clausius' Mechanical Proof of the Heat Theorem
152(3)
6.6 Priority Discussion of Boltzmann (vs. Clausius)
155(1)
6.7 Priority Discussion: Clausius' Reply
156(5)
6.8 On the Ergodic Hypothesis (Trilogy: #1)
161(5)
6.9 Canonical Ensemble and Ergodic Hypothesis (Trilogy: #2)
166(4)
6.10 Heat Theorem Without Dynamics (Trilogy: #3)
170(1)
6.11 Irreversibility: Loschmidt and "Boltzmann's Sea"
171(7)
6.12 Discrete Phase Space, Count of Its Points and Entropy
178(4)
6.13 Monocyclic and Orthodic Systems: Ensembles
182(9)
6.14 Maxwell 1866
191(10)
6.14.1 Friction Phenomenology
192(1)
6.14.2 Collision Kinematics
193(1)
6.14.3 Observables Variation upon Collision
193(2)
6.14.4 About the "Precarious Assumption"
195(1)
6.14.5 Balance of the Variations of Key Observables
195(1)
6.14.6 Towards the Continua
196(1)
6.14.7 "Weak" Boltzmann Equation
197(1)
6.14.8 The Heat Conduction Example
198(1)
References
199(2)
Appendices 201(40)
Author Index 241(4)
Subject Index 245