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Fluctuation dissipation theorem

 

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Fluctuation dissipation theorem



 
 
In statistical physics
Statistical physics

Statistical physics is the area of physics that uses methods of probability theory and statistics, and particularly the Mathematics tools for dealing with large populations, in solving physical problems....
, the fluctuation dissipation theorem is a powerful tool for predicting the non-equilibrium behavior
Non-equilibrium thermodynamics

Non-equilibrium thermodynamics is a branch of thermodynamics concerned with studying time-dependent thermodynamic systems, irreversible transformations and Open system ....
 of a system — such as the irreversible
Irreversibility

In science, a process that is not reversible is called irreversible. This concept arises most frequently in thermodynamics, as applied to thermodynamic processes....
 dissipation
Dissipation

In physics, dissipation embodies the concept of a dynamical system where important mechanical modes, such as waves or oscillations, lose energy over time, typically due to the action of friction or turbulence....
 of energy into heat
Heat

In physics and thermodynamics, heat is any transfer of energy from one body or thermodynamic system to another due to a difference in temperature....
 — from its reversible
Reversible process (thermodynamics)

In thermodynamics, a reversible process, or reversible cycle if the process is cyclic, is a process that can be "reversed" by means of infinitesimal changes in some property of the system without loss or dissipation of energy....
 fluctuations in thermal equilibrium
Thermodynamic equilibrium

In thermodynamics, a thermodynamics#Thermodynamic system is said to be in thermodynamic equilibrium when it is in thermal equilibrium, mechanical equilibrium, and chemical equilibrium....
. The fluctuation dissipation theorem applies both to classical
Classical physics

Classical physics is a general term used to describe the branches of physics based on principles developed before the rise of general theory of relativity and Quantum mechanics, usually including special theory of relativity....
 and quantum mechanical
Quantum mechanics

Quantum mechanics is a set of principles underlying the most fundamental known description of all physical systems at the microscopic scale . Notable amongst these principles are both a dual wave-like and particle-like behavior of matter and radiation, and prediction of probabilities in situations where classical physics predicts certaintie...
 systems. Although formulated originally by Nyquist
Nyquist

Nyquist can refer to:People:*Arild Nyquist , a Norwegian novelist, lyricist, writer of children's books and musician* Harry Nyquist , an engineer who developed theories of noise, system stability, and telegraph signalling...
 in 1928, the fluctuation-dissipation theorem was first proved by Herbert B. Callen
Herbert Callen

Herbert B. Callen was an United States physicist best known as the author of the textbook Thermodynamics and an Introduction to Thermostatistics, the most frequently cited thermodynamic reference in physics research literature....
 and Theodore A. Welton in 1951.






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In statistical physics
Statistical physics

Statistical physics is the area of physics that uses methods of probability theory and statistics, and particularly the Mathematics tools for dealing with large populations, in solving physical problems....
, the fluctuation dissipation theorem is a powerful tool for predicting the non-equilibrium behavior
Non-equilibrium thermodynamics

Non-equilibrium thermodynamics is a branch of thermodynamics concerned with studying time-dependent thermodynamic systems, irreversible transformations and Open system ....
 of a system — such as the irreversible
Irreversibility

In science, a process that is not reversible is called irreversible. This concept arises most frequently in thermodynamics, as applied to thermodynamic processes....
 dissipation
Dissipation

In physics, dissipation embodies the concept of a dynamical system where important mechanical modes, such as waves or oscillations, lose energy over time, typically due to the action of friction or turbulence....
 of energy into heat
Heat

In physics and thermodynamics, heat is any transfer of energy from one body or thermodynamic system to another due to a difference in temperature....
 — from its reversible
Reversible process (thermodynamics)

In thermodynamics, a reversible process, or reversible cycle if the process is cyclic, is a process that can be "reversed" by means of infinitesimal changes in some property of the system without loss or dissipation of energy....
 fluctuations in thermal equilibrium
Thermodynamic equilibrium

In thermodynamics, a thermodynamics#Thermodynamic system is said to be in thermodynamic equilibrium when it is in thermal equilibrium, mechanical equilibrium, and chemical equilibrium....
. The fluctuation dissipation theorem applies both to classical
Classical physics

Classical physics is a general term used to describe the branches of physics based on principles developed before the rise of general theory of relativity and Quantum mechanics, usually including special theory of relativity....
 and quantum mechanical
Quantum mechanics

Quantum mechanics is a set of principles underlying the most fundamental known description of all physical systems at the microscopic scale . Notable amongst these principles are both a dual wave-like and particle-like behavior of matter and radiation, and prediction of probabilities in situations where classical physics predicts certaintie...
 systems. Although formulated originally by Nyquist
Nyquist

Nyquist can refer to:People:*Arild Nyquist , a Norwegian novelist, lyricist, writer of children's books and musician* Harry Nyquist , an engineer who developed theories of noise, system stability, and telegraph signalling...
 in 1928, the fluctuation-dissipation theorem was first proved by Herbert B. Callen
Herbert Callen

Herbert B. Callen was an United States physicist best known as the author of the textbook Thermodynamics and an Introduction to Thermostatistics, the most frequently cited thermodynamic reference in physics research literature....
 and Theodore A. Welton in 1951.

The fluctuation dissipation theorem relies on the assumption that the response of a system in thermodynamic equilibrium to a small applied force is the same as its response to a spontaneous fluctuation. Therefore, there is a direct relation between the fluctuation properties of the thermodynamic system and its linear response properties. Often the linear response takes the form of one or more exponential decays.

Example: Brownian motion

For example, Einstein
Albert Einstein

Albert Einstein was a Germany-born theoretical physics. He is best known for his theory of relativity and specifically mass?energy equivalence, expressed by the equation E = mc2....
 in his 1905 paper on Brownian motion
Brownian motion

Brownian motion is the seemingly random movement of particles suspended in a liquid or gas or the mathematical model used to describe such random movements, often called a particle theory....
 noted that the same random forces which cause the erratic motion of a particle in Brownian motion would also cause drag if the particle were pulled through the fluid. In other words, the fluctuation of the particle at rest has the same origin as the dissipative frictional force one must do work against, if one tries to perturb the system in a particular direction.

From this observation he was able to use statistical mechanics
Statistical mechanics

Statistical mechanics is the application of probability theory, which includes Mathematics tools for dealing with large populations, to the field of mechanics, which is concerned with the motion of particles or objects when subjected to a force....
 to derive a previously unexpected connection, the Einstein-Smoluchowski relation
Einstein relation (kinetic theory)

In physics the Einstein relation is a previously unexpected connection revealed independently by Albert Einstein in 1905 and by Marian Smoluchowski in their papers on Brownian motion:...
:



linking D, the diffusion constant
Fick's law of diffusion

Fick's laws of diffusion describe diffusion and can be used to solve for the diffusion coefficient D. They were derived by Adolf Fick in the year 1855....
, and µ, the mobility
Mobility

Mobility is the state of being in Motion .Mobility may also refer to:...
 of the particles. (µ is the ratio of the particle's terminal drift velocity to an applied force, µ = vd / F). kB ˜ 1.38065 × 10−23 m² kg s−2 K−1 is Boltzmann's constant, and T is the absolute temperature.

Example: Thermal noise in a resistor

In 1928, John B. Johnson
John B. Johnson

John Bertrand "Bert" Johnson was a Sweden-born United States electrical engineer and physicist. He first explained in detail a fundamental source of noise with information traveling on wires....
 discovered and Harry Nyquist
Harry Nyquist

Harry Nyquist , was an important contributor to information theory....
 explained Johnson–Nyquist noise
Johnson–Nyquist noise

Johnson?Nyquist noise is the electronic noise noise generated by the thermal agitation of the charge carriers inside an electrical conductor at equilibrium, which happens regardless of any applied voltage....
. With no applied current, the mean-square voltage depends on the resistance R, , and the bandwidth over which the voltage is measured:



General applicability

The examples above are consequences of the fluctuation dissipation theorem, a very general result of statistical thermodynamics which quantifies the relation between the fluctuations in a system at thermal equilibrium and the response of the system to applied perturbations. It thus allows, for example, the use of molecular models to predict material properties in the context of linear response theory. The theorem assumes that applied perturbations (mechanical forces, electric fields, etc.) are weak enough that rates of relaxation
Relaxation time

Relaxation time is a general concept in physics for the characteristic time in which a system changes to an equilibrium condition from a non-equilibrium condition....
 remain unchanged.

General form of the fluctuation dissipation theorem

The fluctuation-dissipation theorem can be formulated in many ways; one particularly useful form is the following:

Let x be an observable of a dynamical system with Hamiltonian
Hamiltonian

Hamiltonian may refer toIn mathematics:* Hamiltonian system* Hamiltonian path, in graph theory* Hamiltonian group, in group theory* Hamiltonian ...
 H0(x) subject to thermal fluctuations. The observable x will fluctuate around its mean value with fluctuations characterized by a power spectrum . Suppose that we can switch on a (scalar) field f which alters the Hamiltonian to . The response of the observable x to a field f(t) changing with time is characterized (to first order) by the susceptibility
Susceptibility

*In physics, the susceptibility of a material or substance describes its response to an applied field. There are many kinds of susceptibilities, for example:...
 or linear response function
Linear response function

A linear response function describes the input-output relationshipof a signal transducer such as a radio turning electromagnetic waves into music...
of the system



where the perturbation is adiabatically switched on at .

Now the fluctuation dissipation theorem relates the power spectrum to the imaginary part of the Fourier transform
Fourier transform

In mathematics, Fourier analysis is a subject area which grew out of the study of Fourier series. The subject began with trying to understand when it was possible to represent general functions by sums of simpler trigonometric functions....
of the susceptibility

.


The left-hand side describes fluctuations in x, the right-hand side is closely related to the energy dissipated by the system when pumped by an oscillatory field .

(This is already the classical form of the theorem; quantum fluctuations are taken into account by replacing the prefactor by . A proof can be found by means of the LSZ reduction, an identity from quantum field theory.)

The fluctuation-dissipation theorem can be generalized in a straight-forward way to the case of space-dependent fields, to the case of several variables or to a quantum-mechanics setting.

Violations of FDT in glassy systems


While the FDT provides a general relation between the response of equilibrium systems to small external perturbations and their spontaneous fluctuations, no general relation is known for systems out of equilibrium.

In the mid 1990s, in the study of non-equilibrium dynamics of spin glass
Spin glass

A spin glass is a magnet with Geometrically frustrated magnet, augmented by stochastic disorder, where usually ferromagnetic and antiferromagnetic bonds are randomly distributed....
 models it was discovered a generalization of FDT valid for asymptotic non-stationary states, where the temperature appearing in the equilibrium relation is substituted by an effective temperature with a non-trivial dependence on the time scales. This relation is proposed to hold in glassy systems beyond the models for which it was initially found.

Derivation I

We derive the fluctuation dissipation theorem in the form given above, using the same notation. Consider the following test case: The field f has been on for infinite time and is switched off at t=0



We can express the expectation value of x by the probability distribution W(x,0) and the transition probability



The probability distribution function W(x,0) is an equilibrium distribution and hence given by the Boltzmann distribution
Boltzmann distribution

In physics and mathematics, the Boltzmann distribution is a certain distribution function or probability measure for the distribution of the states of a system....
 for the Hamiltionian



For a weak field , we can expand the right-hand side



here is the equilibrium distribution in the absence of a field. Plugging this approximation in the formula for yields



where A(t) is the auto-correlation function of x in the absence of a field.



Note that in the absence of a field the system is invariant under time-shifts. We can rewrite using the susceptibility of the system and hence find with the above equation (*)



Consequently,



For stationary process
Stationary process

In the mathematics, a stationary process is a stochastic process whose joint probability distribution does not change when shifted in time or space....
es, the Wiener-Khinchin theorem states, that the power spectrum equals twice the Fourier transform
Fourier transform

In mathematics, Fourier analysis is a subject area which grew out of the study of Fourier series. The subject began with trying to understand when it was possible to represent general functions by sums of simpler trigonometric functions....
 of the auto-correlation function



The last step is to Fourier transform equation (**) and to take the imaginary part. For this it is useful to recall that the Fourier transform of a real symmetric function is real, while the Fourier transform of a real antisymmetric function is purely imaginary. We can split into a symmetric and an anti-symmetric part



Now the fluctuation dissipation theorem follows.

Derivation II

The following general derivation of the fluctuation-dissipation theorem uses averaging in phase space
Phase space

In mathematics and physics, a phase space, introduced by Willard Gibbs in 1901, is a space in which all possible states of a system are represented, with each possible state of the system corresponding to one unique point in the phase space....
. The derivation applies equally well to classical
Classical physics

Classical physics is a general term used to describe the branches of physics based on principles developed before the rise of general theory of relativity and Quantum mechanics, usually including special theory of relativity....
 as well as quantum mechanical
Quantum mechanics

Quantum mechanics is a set of principles underlying the most fundamental known description of all physical systems at the microscopic scale . Notable amongst these principles are both a dual wave-like and particle-like behavior of matter and radiation, and prediction of probabilities in situations where classical physics predicts certaintie...
 systems, although the former uses a continuous integral over phase space, whereas the latter uses a sum over quantum states. To represent both, we introduce the trace
Trace (linear algebra)

In linear algebra, the trace of an n-by-n square matrix A is defined to be the sum of the elements on the main diagonal of A, i.e.,...
 notation
, which applies both to classical and quantum systems

where dG represents an infinitesimal volume in phase space
Phase space

In mathematics and physics, a phase space, introduced by Willard Gibbs in 1901, is a space in which all possible states of a system are represented, with each possible state of the system corresponding to one unique point in the phase space....
. Thus, if a system is described by a probability distribution f(q, p) in phase space, the average value of an arbitrary function A of the system's state is given by

where angular brackets are used to denote the averaging over the ensemble. In particular, if the probability distribution is given by the equilibrium Boltzmann distribution
Boltzmann distribution

In physics and mathematics, the Boltzmann distribution is a certain distribution function or probability measure for the distribution of the states of a system....
, the ensemble average equals

where ß = 1/kBT, kB is the Boltzmann constant
Boltzmann constant

The Boltzmann constant is the physical constant relating energy at the particle level with temperature observed at the bulk level. It is the gas constant R divided by the Avogadro constant NA:...
 and T is the temperature
Temperature

In physics, temperature is a physical property of a Physical system that underlies the common notions of hot and cold; something that feels hotter generally has the greater temperature....
 in Kelvin
Kelvin

The kelvin is a Units of measurement of temperature and is one of the seven SI base units. The Kelvin scale is a Thermodynamic temperature scale where absolute zero, the theoretical absence of all thermal energy, is zero ....
.

Having defined our notation and basic variables, we now derive the fluctuation-dissipation theorem. Consider a system that has reached equilibrium under the Hamiltonian H + h, where h is much smaller than the thermal energy kBT. Being in thermal equilibrium, the probability of any state is proportional to its Boltzmann factor e−ß(H + h). At time t = 0, let the perturbation h be turned off; given ergodicity, the system will gradually relax to a new equilibrium, which has Boltzmann factors e−ßH. The fluctuation-dissipation theorem addresses the question of how quickly the system reaches its new equilibrium.

Let the correlation function c(t) be defined

which may be written as

where dA(t; q, p) is the deviation from its mean at a time t, given that the system began at time t = 0 at position (q, p) in phase space. In other words, the integration is over all initial positions of the system in phase space.

The mean value of A as it evolves towards its new equilibrium is given by

Since h is much smaller than the thermal energy kBT, we may expand the numerator

We may likewise expand the denominator

where we have used

which is much less than one, by our assumption that h is much smaller than the thermal energy 1/ß = kBT.

Combining the numerator and denominator, dropping quadratic and high-order terms in <ßh>, and using the indifference of equilibrium to time, we obtain

Let the perturbation h = −gA be proportional to the variable A with a constant −g. Then this formula becomes

Note that the system's relaxation is independent of A and linear in g. These results imply that perturbations will relax independently of one another; if two perturbations, g1 and g2 are applied, the net relaxation will be the sum of the individual relaxations to g1 and g2 taken separately. Such continuous linear systems have been well-studied, and many methods developed for their solution, such as Fourier transform
Fourier transform

In mathematics, Fourier analysis is a subject area which grew out of the study of Fourier series. The subject began with trying to understand when it was possible to represent general functions by sums of simpler trigonometric functions....
s and Laplace transform
Laplace transform

In mathematics, the Laplace transform is one of the best known and most widely used integral transforms. It is commonly used to produce an easily solvable algebraic equation from an ordinary differential equation....
s.

See also


  • Non-equilibrium thermodynamics
    Non-equilibrium thermodynamics

    Non-equilibrium thermodynamics is a branch of thermodynamics concerned with studying time-dependent thermodynamic systems, irreversible transformations and Open system ....
  • Green-Kubo relations
    Green-Kubo relations

    Green?Kubo relations give exact mathematical expression for transport coefficients in terms of integrals of time correlation functions....
  • Onsager reciprocal relations
    Onsager reciprocal relations

    In thermodynamics, the Onsager reciprocal relations express the equality of certain relations between fluxs and forces in thermodynamic systems out of equilibrium , but where a notion of local thermodynamic equilibrium exists....
  • Equipartition theorem
    Equipartition theorem

    In classical physics statistical mechanics, the equipartition theorem is a general formula that relates the temperature of a system with its average energy....
  • Boltzmann factor
    Boltzmann factor

    In physics, the Boltzmann factor is a weighting factor that determines the relative probability of a state in a multi-state system in thermodynamic equilibrium at temperature ....
  • Dissipative system
    Dissipative system

    A dissipative system is a thermodynamically open system which is operating far from thermodynamic equilibrium in an environment with which it exchanges energy and matter....


Further resources

  • of a lecture by Prof. E. W. Carlson of Purdue University
    Purdue University

    Purdue University, located in West Lafayette, Indiana, Indiana, United States, is the flagship university of the six campuses within the Purdue University System....



  • May 271993