While some of the deepest results in nature are those that give explicit bounds between important physical quantities, some of the most intriguing and celebrated of such bounds come from fields where there is still a great deal of disagreement and confusion regarding even the most fundamental aspects of the theories. For example, in quantum mechanics, there is still no complete consensus as to whether the limitations associated with Heisenberg's Uncertainty Principle derive from an inherent randomness in physics, or rather from limitations in the measurement process itself, resulting from phenomena like back action. Likewise, the second law of thermodynamics makes a statement regarding the increase in entropy of closed systems, yet the the...
An apparent paradox in classical statistical physics is the mechanism by which conservative, time-re...
In this paper, we re-visit Gibbs' second (unresolved) paradox, namely the constancy of the fine-grai...
In this article, it is argued that, for a classical Hamiltonian system which is closed, the ergodic ...
In this paper, we take a control-theoretic approach to answering some standard questions in statisti...
In this paper, we take a control-theoretic approach to answering some standard questions in statisti...
Abstract—In this paper, we take a control-theoretic approach to answering some standard questions in...
Abstract—In this paper, we take a control-theoretic approach to answering some standard questions in...
We study a measurement framework motivated by considering macroscopic (i.e. large, active, and with ...
The present paper is meant to give a simple introduction to the problem of the connection between m...
The present paper is meant to give a simple introduction to the problem of\ud the connection between...
Thermodynamic uncertainty relations quantify how the signal-to-noise ratio of a given observable is ...
We study the connection between dissipation and reality in macroscopic quantum systems. We present t...
The fluctuation-dissipation relation is usually formulated for a system interacting with a heat bath...
We examine the weak noise limit of an overdamped dissipative system within a semiclassical descripti...
Fluctuations around some average or equilibrium state arise universally in physical systems. Large f...
An apparent paradox in classical statistical physics is the mechanism by which conservative, time-re...
In this paper, we re-visit Gibbs' second (unresolved) paradox, namely the constancy of the fine-grai...
In this article, it is argued that, for a classical Hamiltonian system which is closed, the ergodic ...
In this paper, we take a control-theoretic approach to answering some standard questions in statisti...
In this paper, we take a control-theoretic approach to answering some standard questions in statisti...
Abstract—In this paper, we take a control-theoretic approach to answering some standard questions in...
Abstract—In this paper, we take a control-theoretic approach to answering some standard questions in...
We study a measurement framework motivated by considering macroscopic (i.e. large, active, and with ...
The present paper is meant to give a simple introduction to the problem of the connection between m...
The present paper is meant to give a simple introduction to the problem of\ud the connection between...
Thermodynamic uncertainty relations quantify how the signal-to-noise ratio of a given observable is ...
We study the connection between dissipation and reality in macroscopic quantum systems. We present t...
The fluctuation-dissipation relation is usually formulated for a system interacting with a heat bath...
We examine the weak noise limit of an overdamped dissipative system within a semiclassical descripti...
Fluctuations around some average or equilibrium state arise universally in physical systems. Large f...
An apparent paradox in classical statistical physics is the mechanism by which conservative, time-re...
In this paper, we re-visit Gibbs' second (unresolved) paradox, namely the constancy of the fine-grai...
In this article, it is argued that, for a classical Hamiltonian system which is closed, the ergodic ...