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Published February 2011 | public
Journal Article

On Lossless Approximations, the Fluctuation-Dissipation Theorem, and Limitations of Measurements

Abstract

In this paper, we take a control-theoretic approach to answering some standard questions in statistical mechanics, and use the results to derive limitations of classical measurements. A central problem is the relation between systems which appear macroscopically dissipative but are microscopically lossless. We show that a linear system is dissipative if, and only if, it can be approximated by a linear lossless system over arbitrarily long time intervals. Hence lossless systems are in this sense dense in dissipative systems. A linear active system can be approximated by a nonlinear lossless system that is charged with initial energy. As a by-product, we obtain mechanisms explaining the Onsager relations from time-reversible lossless approximations, and the fluctuation-dissipation theorem from uncertainty in the initial state of the lossless system. The results are applied to measurement devices and are used to quantify limits on the so-called observer effect, also called back action, which is the impact the measurement device has on the observed system. In particular, it is shown that deterministic back action can be compensated by using active elements, whereas stochastic back action is unavoidable and depends on the temperature of the measurement device.

Additional Information

© 2011 IEEE. Manuscript received April 15, 2009; revised January 19, 2010 and May 04, 2010; accepted May 25, 2010. Date of publication July 08, 2010; date of current version February 09, 2011. This work was supported in part by the Swedish Research Council under Grant 2007-6350 and Grant 2009-4565 , Swedish Foundation for Strategic Research, the Belgian Programme on Interuniversity Attraction Poles DYSCO, initiated by the Belgian Federal Science Policy Office, and Grants NSF-EFRI-0735956, AFOSR-FA9550-08-1-0043, and ONR-MURI- N00014-08-1-0747. Recommended by Associate Editor K. Morris.

Additional details

Created:
August 22, 2023
Modified:
October 23, 2023