A Framework of Nonequilibrium Statistical Mechanics. I. Role and Types of Fluctuations

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Abstract

Understanding the fluctuations by which phenomenological evolution equations with thermodynamic structure can be enhanced is the key to a general framework of nonequilibrium statistical mechanics. These fluctuations provide an idealized representation of microscopic details. We consider fluctuation-enhanced equations associated with Markov processes and elaborate the general recipes for evaluating dynamic material properties, which characterize force-flux constitutive laws, by statistical mechanics. Markov processes with continuous trajectories are conveniently characterized by stochastic differential equations and lead to Green-Kubo-type formulas for dynamic material properties. Markov processes with discontinuous jumps include transitions over energy barriers with the rates calculated by Kramers. We describe a unified approach to Markovian fluctuations and demonstrate how the appropriate type of fluctuations (continuous versus discontinuous) is reflected in the mathematical structure of the phenomenological equations.

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Öttinger, H. C., Peletier, M. A., & Montefusco, A. (2021). A Framework of Nonequilibrium Statistical Mechanics. I. Role and Types of Fluctuations. Journal of Non-Equilibrium Thermodynamics, 46(1), 1–13. https://doi.org/10.1515/jnet-2020-0068

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