Generalized entropy production in collisionless plasma flows and turbulence
Vladimir Zhdankin

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new theoretical framework based on Casimir invariants to quantify entropy production in collisionless plasmas, revealing significant entropy generation in turbulent relativistic flows despite conservation laws.
Contribution
The authors develop a novel approach using Casimir momenta to characterize generalized entropy production, extending beyond traditional Boltzmann-Gibbs entropy in collisionless plasma dynamics.
Findings
Turbulence causes substantial anomalous entropy production.
Casimir momenta growth indicates irreversible entropy increase.
Framework applicable to relativistic plasma simulations.
Abstract
Collisionless plasmas exhibit nonthermal particle distributions after being energized; as a consequence, they enter a state of low Boltzmann-Gibbs (BG) entropy relative to the thermal state. The Vlasov equations predict that in a collisionless plasma with closed boundaries, BG entropy is formally conserved, along with an infinite set of Casimir invariants; this provides a seemingly strong constraint that may explain how plasmas maintain low entropy. Nevertheless, it is commonly believed that entropy production is enabled by phase mixing or nonlinear entropy cascades. The question of whether such anomalous entropy production occurs, and of how to characterize it quantitatively, is a fundamental problem in plasma physics. We construct a new theoretical framework for characterizing entropy production (in a generalized sense) based on ideally conserved dimensional quantities derived from…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFluid Dynamics and Turbulent Flows · Particle Dynamics in Fluid Flows · Statistical Mechanics and Entropy
