Nonadditive entropy: the concept and its use
Constantino Tsallis

TL;DR
This paper discusses the nonadditive entropy $S_q$, its conditions for extensivity in complex systems, and reviews recent theoretical developments and experimental confirmations related to $q$-generalized statistical mechanics.
Contribution
It introduces the concept of $q$-entropy, explains its role in describing complex systems, and reviews recent theorems and experimental evidence supporting $q$-generalized statistics.
Findings
$S_q$ is extensive for systems with specific nonlocal correlations at $q_{ent}$
$q$-generalized Central Limit Theorem and Lévy-Gnedenko theorem have been established
Experimental and computational evidence supports $q$-statistics in various systems
Abstract
The entropic form is, for any , {\it nonadditive}. Indeed, for two probabilistically independent subsystems, it satisfies . This form will turn out to be {\it extensive} for an important class of nonlocal correlations, if is set equal to a special value different from unity, noted (where stands for ). In other words, for such systems, we verify that , thus legitimating the use of the classical thermodynamical relations. Standard systems, for which is extensive, obviously correspond to . Quite complex systems exist in the sense that, for them, no value of exists such that is extensive. Such systems are out of the present scope: they might need forms of entropy different from , or perhaps -- more…
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