1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910438139203321

Titolo

Time : Poincaré Seminar 2010 / / edited by Bertrand Duplantier

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Basel : , : Springer Basel : , : Imprint : Birkhäuser, , 2013

ISBN

3-0348-0359-1

Edizione

[1st ed. 2013.]

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (219 p.)

Collana

Progress in Mathematical Physics, , 1544-9998 ; ; 63

Disciplina

530.15

Soggetti

Dynamics

Ergodic theory

Mathematical physics

Statistical physics

Dynamical systems

Quantum physics

Probabilities

Mechanics

Dynamical Systems and Ergodic Theory

Mathematical Physics

Complex Systems

Quantum Physics

Probability Theory and Stochastic Processes

Classical Mechanics

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Note generali

Description based upon print version of record.

Nota di bibliografia

Includes bibliographical references.

Nota di contenuto

Foreword -- Time and Relativity, Thibault Damour -- (Ir)reversibility and Entropy, Cédric Villani -- (Ir)réversibilité et entropie, Cédric Villani -- Equalities and Inequalities: Irreversibility and the Second Law of Thermodynamics at the Nanoscale, Christopher Jarzynski -- Time Measurement in the XXIst Century, Christophe Salomon -- Time’s Arrow and Eddington’s Challenge, Huw Price -- Image of Time’s Irreversibility, Catherine de Mitry -- Image de l'irréversibilité du Temps, Catherine de Mitry.

Sommario/riassunto

This eleventh volume in the Poincaré Seminar Series presents an



interdisciplinary perspective on the concept of Time, which poses some of the most challenging questions in science. Five articles, written by the Fields medalist C. Villani, the two outstanding theoretical physicists T. Damour and C. Jarzynski, the leading experimentalist C. Salomon, and the famous philosopher of science H. Price, describe recent developments related to the mathematical, physical, experimental, and philosophical facets of this fascinating concept. These articles are also highly pedagogical, as befits their origin in lectures to a broad scientific audience. Highlights include a description of the manifold fundamental physical issues in play with time, in particular with the changes of perspective implied by Special and General Relativity; a mathematically precise discussion of irreversibility and entropy in the context of Boltzmann's and Vlasov's equations; a thorough survey of the recently developed “thermodynamics at the nanoscale,” the scale most relevant to biological physics; a description of the new cold atom space clock PHARAO to be installed in 2015 onboard the International Space Station, which will allow a test of Einstein's gravitational shift with a record precision of 2 × 10-6, and enable a test of the stability over time of the fundamental constants of physics, an issue first raised by Dirac in 1937; and last, but not least, a logical and clarifying philosophical discussion of ‘Time's arrow’, a phrase first coined by Eddington in 1928 in a challenge to physics to resolve the puzzle of the time-asymmetry of our universe, and echoed here in a short poème en prose by C. de Mitry. This book should be of broad general interest to physicists, mathematicians, and philosophers.