Chaos and relaxation to equilibrium in systems with long-range interactions
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Date
2015Type
Abstract
In the thermodynamic limit, systems with long-range interactions do not relax to equilibrium, but become trapped in nonequilibrium stationary states. For a finite number of particles a nonequilibrium state has a finite lifetime, so that eventually a system will relax to thermodynamic equilibrium. The time that a system remains trapped in a quasistationary state (QSS) scales with the number of particles as Nδ, with δ > 0, and diverges in the thermodynamic limit. In this paper we will explore the ...
In the thermodynamic limit, systems with long-range interactions do not relax to equilibrium, but become trapped in nonequilibrium stationary states. For a finite number of particles a nonequilibrium state has a finite lifetime, so that eventually a system will relax to thermodynamic equilibrium. The time that a system remains trapped in a quasistationary state (QSS) scales with the number of particles as Nδ, with δ > 0, and diverges in the thermodynamic limit. In this paper we will explore the role of chaotic dynamics on the time that a system remains trapped in a QSS.We discover that chaos, measured by the Lyapunov exponents, favors faster relaxation to equilibrium. Surprisingly, weak chaos favors faster relaxation than strong chaos. ...
In
Physical review. E, Statistical, nonlinear, and soft matter physics. Vol. 92, no. 5 (Nov. 2015), 052123, 7 p.
Source
Foreign
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