Optimal control of non-equilibrium processes in stochastic thermodynamics

Lecturer : 
Paolo Muratore-Ginanneschi
Event type: 
HIIT seminar
Doctoral dissertation
Respondent: 
Opponent: 
Custos: 
Event time: 
2012-08-20 13:15 to 14:00
Place: 
ICS building, Lecture hall T2
Description: 

Abstract:

Physicists and Probabilists have been studying the time reversal properties of Markov processes since at least the famous 1931 paper by E Schroedinger "\"Uber die Umkehrung der Naturgesetze". This interest was until the end of the last decade of last century mainly motivated by the quest for a probabilistic interpretation of Quantum  Mechanics.

The recent advent of manipulation techniques of nano-systems has brought about a renewed interest in this topic. In particular, it has been shown that a certain functional related to the time reversal of a Markov process can be consistently interpreted as the entropy production during a non-equilibrium classical transformation. This bridge relation between stochastic process theory and physics can be then used to investigate questions such how to drive a system from a thermodynamical state to another while minimizing a given thermodynamic functional.
Stochastic control theory provides then the natural tools to use. We will try to give a pedagogic overview of some recent results in this direction.


Bio:

Paolo Muratore-Ginanneschi is  currently a University Researcher in the mathematics department at the University of Helsinki. His research interests lie in statistical non-equilibrium physics, and applied stochastic processes.


Last updated on 13 Aug 2012 by Sohan Seth - Page created on 13 Aug 2012 by Sohan Seth