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Published August 2007 | Published + Submitted
Journal Article Open

Quasiclassical coarse graining and thermodynamic entropy

Abstract

Our everyday descriptions of the universe are highly coarse grained, following only a tiny fraction of the variables necessary for a perfectly fine-grained description. Coarse graining in classical physics is made natural by our limited powers of observation and computation. But in the modern quantum mechanics of closed systems, some measure of coarse graining is inescapable because there are no nontrivial, probabilistic, fine-grained descriptions. This essay explores the consequences of that fact. Quantum theory allows for various coarse-grained descriptions, some of which are mutually incompatible. For most purposes, however, we are interested in the small subset of "quasiclassical descriptions" defined by ranges of values of averages over small volumes of densities of conserved quantities such as energy and momentum and approximately conserved quantities such as baryon number. The near-conservation of these quasiclassical quantities results in approximate decoherence, predictability, and local equilibrium, leading to closed sets of equations of motion. In any description, information is sacrificed through the coarse graining that yields decoherence and gives rise to probabilities for histories. In quasiclassical descriptions, further information is sacrificed in exhibiting the emergent regularities summarized by classical equations of motion. An appropriate entropy measures the loss of information. For a "quasiclassical realm" this is connected with the usual thermodynamic entropy as obtained from statistical mechanics. It was low for the initial state of our universe and has been increasing since.

Additional Information

© 2007 American Physical Society. Received 24 December 2006; published 20 August 2007. We thank J. Halliwell and S. Lloyd for useful recent discussions. We thank the Aspen Center for Physics for hospitality over several summers while this work was in progress. J.B.H. thanks the Santa Fe Institute for supporting several visits there. The work of J.B.H. was supported in part by the National Science Foundation under Grant No. PHY02-44764 and Grant No. PHY05-55669. The work of M.G.-M. was supported by the C.O.U.Q. Foundation, by Insight Venture Management, and by the KITP in Santa Barbara. The generous help provided by these organizations is gratefully acknowledged.

Attached Files

Published - PhysRevA.76.022104.pdf

Submitted - 0609190v3.pdf

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August 19, 2023
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