English

Fluctuation relations: a pedagogical overview

Statistical Mechanics 2012-02-01 v1

Abstract

The fluctuation relations have received considerable attention since their emergence and development in the 1990s. We present a summary of the main results and suggest ways to interpret this material. Starting with a consideration of the under-determined time evolution of a simple open system, formulated using continuous Markovian stochastic dy- namics, an expression for the entropy generated over a time interval is developed in terms of the probability of observing a trajectory associated with a prescribed driving protocol, and the probability of its time-reverse. This forms the basis for a general theoretical description of non-equilibrium thermodynamic pro- cesses. Having established a connection between entropy production and an inequivalence in probability for forward and time-reversed events, we proceed in the manner of Sekimoto and Seifert, in particular, to derive results in stochastic thermodynamics: a description of the evolution of a system between equilibrium states that ties in with well-established thermodynamic expectations. We derive fluctuation relations, state conditions for their validity, and illustrate their op- eration in some simple cases, thereby providing some introductory insight into the various celebrated symmetry relations that have emerged in this field.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1201.6381,
  title  = {Fluctuation relations: a pedagogical overview},
  author = {Richard E. Spinney and Ian J. Ford},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1201.6381},
  year   = {2012}
}

Comments

Chapter contributed to R.Klages, W.Just, C.Jarzynski (Eds.), Nonequilibrium Statistical Physics of Small Systems: Fluctuation Relations and Beyond (Wiley-VCH, Weinheim, 2012; ISBN 978-3-527-41094-1)

R2 v1 2026-06-21T20:12:11.768Z