4.6 Article

Surprise ballistic and scaling inverted dynamics of a system coupled to a Hamiltonian thermostat

Journal

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/1742-5468/ac0edc

Keywords

Brownian motion; dynamical processes; transport processes; heat transfer

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [11735005]

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Research shows that under a Hamiltonian thermostat, particles controlled by a logarithmic-oscillator thermostat moving in an external logarithmic potential exhibit an inversion in scaling exponents for the mean-squared displacement, with a significant dependence on λ. This continuous reduction of the scaling exponent is crucial in quantitatively evaluating all diffusive processes.
We study the induced generalized Brownian dynamics of a Hamiltonian thermostat, and specifically the diffusive properties. For a tagged particle regulated by a logarithmic-oscillator thermostat and moving in an external logarithmic potential, we reveal a distinct inversion of the scaling exponents for the mean-squared displacement ⟨Delta x (2)(t)⟩ similar to t ( lambda ) around the exponent lambda = 2 - alpha covering regimes from ballistic diffusion to confinement motion (i.e. 0 <= alpha <= 2). This behavior contrasts with the expanding behavior associated with superdiffusive processes in a tilted periodic potential. The Hamiltonian thermostat is shown to maintain a fixed kinetic energy and, although this system is nonergodic in the force-free case, leads to a confined system that approaches thermal equilibrium slowly with the same temperature as the thermostat. In addition, we find its displacement has a significant dependence on lambda via the amplitude of the external logarithmic potential. The continuous reduction of the scaling exponent is vital in the quantitative evaluation of all diffusive processes.

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