Jump to content

Nonextensive entropy: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Started this as best I could - needs serious work form experts.
 
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
[[Entropy]] is considered to be an extensive property, i.e., that its value depends on the amount of material present. [[Constantino Tsallis]] has proposed a '''nonextensive entropy''', which is a generalization of the traditional Boltzman-Gibbs entropy.<br />
[[Entropy]] is considered to be an extensive property, i.e., that its value depends on the amount of material present. [[Constantino Tsallis]] has proposed a '''nonextensive entropy''', which is a generalization of the traditional Boltzmann-Gibbs entropy.<br />


The rationale behind the theory is that Gibbs-Boltzmann entropy leads to systems that have a strong dependence on initial conditions. In reality most materials behave quite independently of initial conditions.<br />
The rationale behind the theory is that Gibbs-Boltzmann entropy leads to systems that have a strong dependence on initial conditions. In reality most materials behave quite independently of initial conditions.<br />

Revision as of 02:21, 12 April 2007

Entropy is considered to be an extensive property, i.e., that its value depends on the amount of material present. Constantino Tsallis has proposed a nonextensive entropy, which is a generalization of the traditional Boltzmann-Gibbs entropy.

The rationale behind the theory is that Gibbs-Boltzmann entropy leads to systems that have a strong dependence on initial conditions. In reality most materials behave quite independently of initial conditions.

Nonextensive entropy leads to nonextensive statistical mechanics, whose typical functions are power laws, instead of the traditional exponentials.

See Also

Tsallis Entropy