The Equivalence of Dissipation from Gibbs’ Entropy Production
with Phase-Volume Loss in Ergodic Heat-Conducting Oscillators
Puneet Kumar Patra
Advanced Technology Development Center,
Department of Civil Engineering,
Indian Institute of Technology, Kharagpur,
West Bengal 721302, India
William Graham Hoover
∗ and Carol Griswold Hoover
Ruby Valley Research Institute, Highway Contract 60,
Box 601, Ruby Valley, Nevada 89833, USA
∗hooverwilliam@yahoo.com
Julien Clinton Sprott
Department of Physics,
University of Wisconsin – Madison,
Wisconsin 53706, USA
Received November 13, 2015
ABSTRACT
Gibbs’ thermodynamic entropy is given by the
logarithm of the phase volume, which itself responds to heat
transfer to and from thermal reservoirs. We compare the
thermodynamic dissipation described by (i) phase-volume loss
with (ii) heat-transfer entropy production. Their equivalence is
documented for computer simulations of the response of an
ergodic harmonic oscillator to thermostated temperature
gradients. In the simulations one or two thermostat variables
control the kinetic energy or the kinetic energy and its
fluctuation. All of the motion equations are time-reversible. We
consider both strong and weak control variables. In every case,
the time-averaged dissipative loss of phase-space volume
coincides with the entropy produced by heat transfer.
Linear-response theory nicely reproduces the small-gradient
results obtained by computer simulation. The thermostats
considered here are ergodic and provide simple dynamical models,
some of them with as few as three ordinary differential
equations, while remaining capable of reproducing Gibbs’
canonical phase-space distribution and are precisely consistent
with irreversible thermodynamics.
Ref: P. K. Patra, W. G. Hoover, C. G. Hoover, and J. C. Sprott,
International Journal of Bifurcation and Chaos 26 1650089 (2016)