Boltzmann Bridges
Jordan Scharnhorst, David Wolpert, Carlo Rovelli

TL;DR
This paper challenges the traditional view that entropy always increases over time by showing that conditioning on multiple time points can produce complex entropy dynamics, including entropy decreases and maxima in the past.
Contribution
It introduces the concept of Boltzmann bridges, demonstrating how conditioning on multiple times alters entropy evolution, contrary to standard assumptions.
Findings
Expected entropy conditioned on two times can have a maximum in the past.
The derivative of expected entropy at the present can be negative.
Entropy dynamics can be non-monotonic and complex under multiple-time conditioning.
Abstract
It is often stated that the second law of thermodynamics follows from the condition that at some given time in the past the entropy was lower than it is now. Formally, this condition is the statement that , the expected entropy of the universe at the current time conditioned on its value at a time in the past, is an increasing function of . We point out that in general this is incorrect. The epistemic axioms underlying probability theory say that we should condition expectations on all that we know, and on nothing that we do not know. Arguably, we know the value of the universe's entropy at the present time at least as well as its value at a time in the past, . However, as we show here, conditioning expected entropy on its value at two times rather than one radically changes its dynamics, resulting in a unexpected, very rich structure. For…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStatistical Mechanics and Entropy · Advanced Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics · Quantum many-body systems
