Nonextensive Effects in Hamiltonian Systems

Author(s):  
Andrea Rapisarda ◽  
Vito Latora

The Boltzmann-Gibbs formulation of equilibrium statistical mechanics depends crucially on the nature of the Hamiltonian of the JV-body system under study, but this fact is clearly stated only in the introductions of textbooks and, in general, it is very soon neglected. In particular, the very same basic postulate of equilibrium statistical mechanics, the famous Boltzmann principle S = k log W of the microcanonical ensemble, assumes that dynamics can be automatically an easily taken into account, although this is not always justified, as Einstein himself realized [20]. On the other hand, the Boltzmann-Gibbs canonical ensemble is valid only for sufficiently short-range interactions and does not necessarily apply, for example, to gravitational or unscreened Colombian fields for which the usually assumed entropy extensivity postulate is not valid [5]. In 1988, Constantino Tsallis proposed a generalized thermostatistics formalism based on a nonextensive entropic form [24]. Since then, this new theory has been encountering an increasing number of successful applications in different fields (for some recent examples see Abe and Suzuki [1], Baldovin and Robledo [4], Beck et al. [8], Kaniadakis et al. [12], Latora et al. [16], and Tsallis et al. [25]) and seems to be the best candidate for a generalized thermodynamic formalism which should be valid when nonextensivity, long-range correlations, and fractal structures in phase space cannot be neglected: in other words, when the dynamics play a nontrivial role [11] and fluctuations are quite large and non-Gaussian [6, 7, 8, 24, 26]. In this contribution we consider a nonextensive JV-body classical Hamiltonian system, with infinite range interaction, the so-called Hamiltonian mean field (HMF) model, which has been intensively studied in the last several years [3, 13, 14, 15, 17, 18, 19]. The out-of-equilibrium dynamics of the model exhibits a series of anomalies like negative specific heat, metastable states, vanishing Lyapunov exponents, and non-Gaussian velocity distributions. After a brief overview of these anomalies, we show how they can be interpreted in terms of nonextensive thermodynamics according to the present understanding.

2021 ◽  
Vol 183 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Alberto Fachechi

AbstractWe examine the duality relating the equilibrium dynamics of the mean-field p-spin ferromagnets at finite size in the Guerra’s interpolation scheme and the Burgers hierarchy. In particular, we prove that—for fixed p—the expectation value of the order parameter on the first side w.r.t. the generalized partition function satisfies the $$p-1$$ p - 1 -th element in the aforementioned class of nonlinear equations. In the light of this duality, we interpret the phase transitions in the thermodynamic limit of the statistical mechanics model with the development of shock waves in the PDE side. We also obtain the solutions for the p-spin ferromagnets at fixed N, allowing us to easily generate specific solutions of the corresponding equation in the Burgers hierarchy. Finally, we obtain an effective description of the finite N equilibrium dynamics of the $$p=2$$ p = 2 model with some standard tools in PDE side.


2019 ◽  
pp. 63-110
Author(s):  
Hans-Peter Eckle

Chapter 4 reviews the basic notions of equilibrium statistical mechanics and begins with its fundamental postulate and outlines the structure of the theory using the most important of the various statistical ensembles, the microcanonical, the canonical, and the grand canonical ensemble and their corresponding thermodynamic potential, the internal energy, the Helmholtz free energy, and the grand canonical potential. The notions of temperature, pressure, and chemical potential are obtained and it introduces the laws of thermodynamics, the Gibbs entropy, and the concept of the partition function. It also discusses quantum statistical mechanics using the density matrix and as applied to non-interacting Bosonic and Fermionic quantum gases, the former showing Bose–Einstein condensation. The mean-field theory of interacting magnetic moments and the transfer matrix to exactly solve the Ising model in one dimension serve as applications.


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