Threshold for everlasting initial memory in equilibration processes
Abstract
Conventional wisdom indicates that initial memory should decay away exponentially in time for general (noncritial) equilibration processes. In particular, time-integrated quantities such as heat are presumed to lose initial memory in a sufficiently long-time limit. However, we show that the large deviation function of time-integrated quantities may exhibit initial memory effect even in the infinite-time limit, if the system is initially prepared sufficiently far away from equilibrium. For a Brownian particle dynamics, as an example, we found a sharp finite threshold rigorously, beyond which the corresponding large deviation function contains everlasting initial memory. The physical origin for this phenomenon is explored with an intuitive argument and also from a toy model analysis.
Keywords
Cite
@article{arxiv.1209.5815,
title = {Threshold for everlasting initial memory in equilibration processes},
author = {J. S. Lee and Chulan Kwon and Hyunggyu Park},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1209.5815},
year = {2015}
}
Comments
5 pages (minor modification)