Dynamical large deviations for an inhomogeneous wave kinetic theory: linear wave scattering by a random medium
Yohei Onuki, Jules Guioth, Freddy Bouchet

TL;DR
This paper derives a large deviation principle for the wave kinetic equation describing wave scattering in a random medium, revealing time-reversal symmetry at the mesoscopic fluctuation level, which contrasts with the irreversibility of the averaged dynamics.
Contribution
It provides the first derivation of a large deviation principle for inhomogeneous wave scattering, highlighting the time-reversal symmetry of mesoscopic fluctuations.
Findings
Large deviation principle for spectral density established
Mesoscopic process exhibits time-reversal symmetry
Results applicable to wave scattering in random media
Abstract
The wave kinetic equation predicts the averaged temporal evolution of a continuous spectral density of waves either randomly interacting or scattered by the fine structure of a medium. In a wide range of systems, the wave kinetic equation is derived from a fundamental equation of wave motion, which is symmetric through time-reversal. By contrast, the corresponding wave kinetic equation is time-irreversible. A similar paradox appears whenever one makes a mesoscopic description of the evolution of a very large number of microscopic degrees of freedom. Recently, it has been understood that the kinetic description itself, at a mesoscopic level, should not break time-reversal symmetry. The proper theoretical or mathematical tool to derive a mesoscopic time-reversal stochastic process is large deviation theory, for which the deterministic wave kinetic equation appears as the most probable…
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