Nonequilibrium oscillations, probability angular momentum, and the climate system
Jeffrey B. Weiss, Baylor Fox-Kemper, Dibyendu Mandal, Arin D. Nelson,, R. K. P. Zia

TL;DR
This paper introduces the concept of probability angular momentum to characterize nonequilibrium steady states in climate systems, revealing persistent probability currents that manifest as climate oscillations like ENSO and MJO.
Contribution
It proposes a novel diagnostic, probability angular momentum, to quantify and analyze persistent probability currents in climate variability, linking them to observed climate oscillations.
Findings
Persistent currents observed in climate indices
Probability angular momentum aligns with climate oscillation patterns
Good agreement with linear Gaussian model analysis
Abstract
Though the Boltzmann-Gibbs framework of equilibrium statistical mechanics has been successful in many arenas, it is clearly inadequate for describing many interesting natural phenomena driven far from equilibrium. The simplest step towards that goal is a better understanding of nonequilibrium steady-states (NESS). Here we focus on one of the distinctive features of NESS, persistent probability currents, and their manifestations in our climate system. We consider the natural variability of the steady-state climate system, which can be approximated as a NESS. These currents must form closed loops, which are odd under time reversal, providing the crucial difference between systems in thermal equilibrium and NESS. Seeking manifestations of such current loops leads us naturally to the notion of probability angular momentum and oscillations in the space of observables. Specifically, we will…
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