Nonequilibrium, thermostats, and thermodynamic limit
From MaRDI portal
Publication:3580888
DOI10.1063/1.3257618zbMath1245.82036arXiv0905.3150OpenAlexW2009066020MaRDI QIDQ3580888
Errico Presutti, Giovanni Gallavotti
Publication date: 13 August 2010
Published in: Journal of Mathematical Physics (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://arxiv.org/abs/0905.3150
Dynamical systems in other branches of physics (quantum mechanics, general relativity, laser physics) (37N20) Classical dynamic and nonequilibrium statistical mechanics (general) (82C05)
Related Items (6)
An almost sure ergodic theorem for quasistatic dynamical systems ⋮ Stationary states in infinite volume with non-zero current ⋮ THERMODYNAMIC LIMIT IN STATISTICAL PHYSICS ⋮ Frictionless thermostats and intensive constants of motion ⋮ Thermodynamic limit for isokinetic thermostats ⋮ Sampling and Statistical Physics via Symmetry
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Boundary dissipation in a driven hard disk system
- Thermostats, chaos and Onsager reciprocity
- Non-equilibrium statistical mechanics of anharmonic chains coupled to two heat baths at different temperatures
- Smooth dynamics and new theoretical ideas in nonequilibrium statistical mechanics
- A remark on the equivalence of isokinetic and isoenergetic thermostats in the thermodynamic limit
- Natural nonequilibrium states in quantum statistical mechanics
- Dynamics of infinitely many particles mutually interacting in three dimensions via a bounded superstable long-range potential
- Chaotic hypothesis, fluctuation theorem and singularities
- Superstable interactions in classical statistical mechanics
- Entropy, thermostats, and chaotic hypothesis
- HOW SHOULD ONE DEFINE ENTROPY PRODUCTION FOR NONEQUILIBRIUM QUANTUM SPIN SYSTEMS?
- On Thermostats: Isokinetic or Hamiltonian? Finite or infinite?
- Non-equilibrium dynamics of three-dimensional infinite particle systems
- Entropy production in quantum spin systems
This page was built for publication: Nonequilibrium, thermostats, and thermodynamic limit