4.7 Article

Geometric approach to nonequilibrium hasty shortcuts

Journal

JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS
Volume 159, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

AIP Publishing
DOI: 10.1063/5.0157846

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Complex and non-monotonic responses to external control can be found in thermodynamic systems, and nonequilibrium shortcuts can rapidly drive the system from an initial state to a desired final state. A geometric analysis of such shortcuts in the probability distribution space is provided, identifying the conditions for their existence and shedding light on the features of a system that can lead to shortcuts.
Complex and even non-monotonic responses to external control can be found in many thermodynamic systems. In such systems, nonequilibrium shortcuts can rapidly drive the system from an initial state to a desired final state. One example is the Mpemba effect, where preheating a system allows it to cool faster. We present nonequilibrium hasty shortcuts-externally controlled temporal protocols that rapidly steer a system from an initial steady state to a desired final steady state. The term hasty indicates that the shortcut only involves fast dynamics without relying on slow relaxations. We provide a geometric analysis of such shortcuts in the space of probability distributions by using timescale separation and eigenmode decomposition. We further identify the necessary and sufficient condition for the existence of nonequilibrium hasty shortcuts in an arbitrary system. The geometric analysis within the probability space sheds light on the possible features of a system that can lead to hasty shortcuts, which can be classified into different categories based on their temporal pattern. We also find that the Mpemba-effect-like shortcuts only constitute a small fraction of the diverse categories of hasty shortcuts. This theory is validated and illustrated numerically in the self-assembly model inspired by viral capsid assembly processes.

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