Page 2: Research news on Nonequilibrium statistical mechanics

Nonequilibrium statistical mechanics is a research area focused on the microscopic foundations and emergent behavior of systems driven away from thermodynamic equilibrium by external forces, gradients, or time-dependent protocols. It extends equilibrium statistical mechanics by analyzing transport processes, relaxation dynamics, fluctuation–dissipation relations, and entropy production in classical and quantum many-body systems. The field encompasses linear and nonlinear response theory, fluctuation theorems, large deviation theory, and stochastic thermodynamics, providing rigorous frameworks to quantify irreversibility, work, heat, and efficiency in driven systems ranging from molecular-scale engines and soft matter to plasmas and complex networks.

Finding information in the randomness of living matter

When describing collective properties of macroscopic physical systems, microscopic fluctuations are typically averaged out, leaving a description of the typical behavior of the systems. While this simplification has its advantages, ...

Exotic phase of matter realized on quantum processor

Phases of matter are the basic states that matter can take—like water that can occur in a liquid or ice phase. Traditionally, these phases are defined under equilibrium conditions, where the system is stable over time. ...

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