Towards a large deviation theory for statistical-mechanical complex systems
Guiomar Ruiz, Constantino Tsallis

TL;DR
This paper explores large deviation principles in complex systems using nonextensive statistical mechanics, demonstrating how correlated models follow q-exponential decay and proposing a foundation for nonextensive large deviation theory.
Contribution
It introduces a q-generalized large deviation framework for correlated systems, extending classical theory to nonextensive statistical mechanics.
Findings
Large deviations follow q-exponential decay with parameter q.
Model yields Q-Gaussian distributions in the large N limit.
Connects nonextensive entropy with large deviation rate functions.
Abstract
The theory of large deviations constitutes a mathematical cornerstone in the foundations of Boltzmann-Gibbs statistical mechanics, based on the additive entropy . Its optimization under appropriate constraints yields the celebrated BG weight . An elementary large-deviation connection is provided by independent binary variables, which, in the limit yields a Gaussian distribution. The probability of having out of throws is governed by the exponential decay , where the rate function is directly related to the relative BG entropy. To deal with a wide class of complex systems, nonextensive statistical mechanics has been proposed, based on the nonadditive entropy (). Its optimization yields the generalized weight…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStatistical Mechanics and Entropy · Complex Systems and Time Series Analysis · Advanced Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics
