|  Arrow of Time and Irreversibility | 
In General
  > s.a. computation; electromagnetism;
  statistical mechanics; thermodyamics;
  time [culturally].
  * Idea: Although the
    fundamental laws are (apparently) time-reversible, real world processes
    don't seem to be; Formally described by using semigroups rather than groups
    of time-evolution operators in physical theories.
  * Versions: Thermodynamical (the
    approach to equilibrium, including entropy production and the tendency of potential
    energy to decrease, particle decay, and radiation); Quantum measurement (may not
    really exist); Cosmological (expansion); Gravitational (clumping); Psychological
    (memory of the past).
  * Relationships: T Gold proposed
    that the thermodynamical and cosmological ones are related; The psychological
    one seemed to be independent, because the entropy of the brain does not
    increase; 2013, Landauer's principle used to explain the relationship between
    psychological and thermodynamic arrows of time.
  * History: 1872, Boltzmann argues
    that irreversibility can be derived from a time-reversible microphysics using
    statistical mechanics and entropy (there are logical gaps, but it has become the
    majority view); 1927, Eddington introduces the expression "arrow of time";
    Supporters of the opinion that irreversibility is fundamental include Planck,
    Poincaré (statistical mechanics is primary, cannot be derived from Newtonian
    physics), Prigogine (the connection goes through unstable systems); 1999, Schulman's
    simulations, two opposite ones can coexist.
  * Open future view: The
    common-sense view that there is an ontological difference between the past,
    the present, and the future; The past and the present are real, whereas
    the future is not yet a part of reality.
  * Points of view:
    Irreversibility is at least partly a question of initial conditions
    [Boltzmann, Reichenbach, Grünbaum], but many hope there is more):
  - Not fundamental: It comes from
    coarse-graining, disordered states being by far more numerous than ordered ones;
    The problem is, At what scale? It could be related to the Big Bang or black holes
    close to the Planck scale.
  - Intermediate: Rohrlich argues that
    the arrow of time is not built into the fundamental equations of motion for
    a point particle (e.g., Lorentz-Abraham-Dirac equation), but appears in every
    finite-size version.
  - Fundamental: Emergent structures
    in non-equilibrium processes, rigged Hilbert spaces (Prigogine and Brussels
    school), related to measurement devices and quantum state reductions, or the
    Weyl curvature hypothesis (Penrose); The problem is, Show how.
  @ I:
    Rothman ThSc(97)jul [Brussels school];
    Magnon 97;
    Dodd SA(08)jan.
  @ Reviews, books: Davies 74;
    Price BJPS(91),
    in(94)gq/93,
    96,
    phy/04-proc;
    Mackey 92;
    Zeh 07,
    a1012-ch;
    Kuzemsky RNC(18),
    FS(20) [interdisciplinary].
  @ General references: Margenau PhSc(54)apr;
    Popper Nat(57)jun;
    Gold in(58),
    AJP(62)jun;
    Coveney Rech(89)feb;
    Page in(91);
    Lebowitz PT(93)sep;
    Savitt ed-94,
    BJPS(96) [rev];
    Nikolić phy/98;
    Rohrlich FP(98) [point particle approximation];
    Bernstein & Erber JPA(99) [local vs global];
    Costa de Beauregard IJTP(99);
    Castagnino qp/00 [global nature];
    Price BJPS(02),
    North BJPS(02) [two conceptions];
    Ćirković & Milošević-Zdjelar FS(04)phy [three];
    Rovelli SHPMP(04) [refute Rohrlich];
    Castagnino & Lombardi JPA(04) [non-entropic];
    Aiello et al FP(08) [local from global];
    Feng & Crooks PRL(08) [length of time arrow];
    Zeh a0908-ch [conceptual];
    Ellis SHPMP(13)-a1302 [top-down causation];
    Barbour et al a1310,
    PRL(14)-a1409
    + Carlip Phy(14)
    + news wired(14)nov [gravitational origin];
    Rovelli a1407,
    a1505 [time-oriented coarse-graining];
    Barbour a1602-proc,
    et al a1604 [in unconfined systems];
    Ellis & Drossel FP(20)-a1911
      [the evolving block universe and the different local arrows of time].
  @ Fundamentally irreversible theory:
    Cortês & Smolin PRD(18)-a1703;
    Diósi Ent(18)-a1806;
    Gallego Torromé a2007 [and emergent quantum theory];
    > s.a. Dynamics.
  @ Psychological arrow of time: Wolpert IJTP(92),
    Maroney FP(10)-a0709 [and computers];
    Mlodinow & Brun PRE(14)-a1310 [and the thermodynamic one].
  @ Conceptual: Reichenbach 56;
    Rakić BJPS(97) [open future and special relativity];
    Dorato SHPMP(06) [becoming];
    Torretti SHPMP(07) [reexamination];
    van Strien SHPMP(13) [mechanism and the reversibility objection];
    Neri a1309 [meta-theoretical approach];
    Chen a2001 [and de se probabilities];
    te Vrugt SHPMP(21)-a2004 [five sub-problems].
  > Online resources:
    see Wikipedia page;
    2015 video with interviews.
   Related subjects:
    see arrow of time in various physical theories.
 Related subjects:
    see arrow of time in various physical theories.
Related Topics
  > s.a. CPT symmetry [time reversal]; hilbert space;
  measurement in quantum mechanics; time in quantum gravity.
  * Past Hypothesis: The assumption, commonly
    used to explain the arrow of time, that the universe started in a low-entropy state.
  @ The Past Hypothesis:
    Earman SHPMP(06) [critique and alternative];
    Wallace in(17);
    Lazarovici & Reichert a1809 [without];
    Gryb a2006 [difficulties];
    Chen a2006 [and quantum entanglement, Humean solution];
    Keming Chen a2008 [as a candidate fundamental law].
  @ And causality: Rohrlich SHPMP(00) [causality and self-interaction];
    Nikolić FPL(06) [and causal paradoxes];
    Coecke & Lal PRL(12)-a1108 [vs causal structure];
    Donoghue & Menezes PPNP(20)-a2003
      [the arrow of time follows from the causal structure of quantum physics].
  @ And information: Hitchcock qp/00;
    Diósi LNP(04)qp/03;
    Schlesinger a1404 [and Gödel incompleteness].
  @ And determinism: Elitzur & Dolev FPL(99)qp/00 [black-hole evaporation],
    PLA(99);
    Dolev et al qp/01/SHPMP.
  @ And chaos:
    Roberts & Quispel PRP(92);
    Calzetta JMP(91);
    Lee PRL(07) [irreversibility not sufficient for chaos];
    > s a. quantum chaos.
  @ Opposing arrows of time: Schulman PRL(99)cm
    + pn(99)dec,
    PRL(00)cm,
    PLA(01)cm [causality paradoxes],
    comment Zeh Ent(06);
    Goldtein & Tumulka CQG(03) [and non-locality];
    Kupervasser et al FP(12)-a1011,
    Kupervasser EJTP-a1106 [instability and universal arrow of time].
  @ Versions, examples: Baker AJP(86)aug [simple model];
    Géhéniau & Prigogine FP(86);
    Bonnor PLA(85),
    PLA(87) [gravitational];
    Brout FP(87);
    Brout et al PLB(87);
    Fukuyama & Morikawa PRD(89);
     Kupervasser EJTP-a1107;
    Hoover & Hoover a2010 [in Hamiltonian mechanics];
    > s.a. Coarse-Graining.
  @ Numerical experiments: Fowles AJP(94)apr;
    Georgeot & Shepelyansky EPJD(02)qp/01 [and quantum computers];
    Seif et al a1909 [machine learning algorithm].
  @ Reversal: news cosmos(19)mar [superconducting qubits in a quantum computer];
    Xian & Zhao PRR(20)-a1911 [wormholes and entangled states].
  > Related topics: see CPT [T-reversal];
    entropy; Evolution; Landauer's Principle;
    Recurrence; thermodynamic concepts [reversible process].
"Then go and invert them"
  – Boltzmann to Loschmidt, who had asked him what
  happens to his statistical theory if one inverts the velocities of all particles.
 main page
  – abbreviations
  – journals – comments
  – other sites – acknowledgements
  send feedback and suggestions to bombelli at olemiss.edu – modified 29 apr 2021