Abstract

The Mpemba effect is a counter-intuitive relaxation phenomenon, where a system prepared at a hot temperature cools down faster than an identical system initiated at a cold temperature when both are quenched to an even colder bath. Such non-monotonic relaxations were observed in various systems, including water, magnetic alloys, polymers, and driven granular gases. We analyze the Mpemba effect in Markovian dynamics and discover that a stronger version of the effect often exists for a carefully chosen set of initial temperatures. In this \emph{strong Mpemba effect}, the relaxation time jumps to a smaller value leading to exponentially faster equilibration dynamics. The number of such special initial temperatures defines the \emph{Mpemba index}, whose parity is a topological property of the system. To demonstrate these concepts, we first analyze the different types of Mpemba relaxations in the mean field anti-ferromagnet Ising model, which demonstrates a surprisingly rich Mpemba phase diagram. Moreover, we show that the strong effect survives the thermodynamic limit and that it is tightly connected with thermal overshoot -- in the relaxation process, the temperature of the relaxing system can decay non-monotonically as a function of time. Using the parity of the Mpemba index, we then study the occurrence of the strong Mpemba effect in a large class of thermal quench processes and show that it happens with non-zero probability even in the thermodynamic limit. This is done by introducing the \emph{isotropic} model for which we obtain analytical lower bound estimates for the probability of the strong Mpemba effects. Consequently, we expect that such exponentially faster relaxations can be observed experimentally in a wide variety of systems.

Highlights

  • The physics of thermal relaxation is rich with fascinating and often surprising behaviors

  • We demonstrate that even though in the thermodynamic limit the probability distribution is concentrated on specific points of phase space, the strong Mpemba effect still exists

  • IV D, we show that the Mpemba effect appears in the thermodynamic limit of the antiferromagnetic Ising model, and lastly, in Sec

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

The physics of thermal relaxation is rich with fascinating and often surprising behaviors. Using geometric insights on the relaxation dynamics in probability space, we show that the Mpemba effect may be substantially enhanced on a discrete set of initial temperatures—a phenomenon we call the strong Mpemba effect. We show that these special initial temperatures can be classified by an integer, which we name the Mpemba index, and whose parity is a topological property of the system. We study the effect in a thermodynamic system focusing on a paradigmatic model: the mean-field Ising antiferromagnet, where a rich Mpemba-phase diagram is found Using this model, we demonstrate that even though in the thermodynamic limit the probability distribution is concentrated on specific points of phase space, the strong Mpemba effect still exists. V B, we study the Mpemba effect in the REM with random barriers

SETUP AND DEFINITIONS
The Mpemba effect
The geometry of the strong Mpemba effect
Robustness of the Mpemba index
MEAN-FIELD ISING ANTIFERROMAGNETIC MODEL WITH GLAUBER DYNAMICS
The model
Mpemba-index phase diagram
The thermodynamic limit
Weak and strong Mpemba effects in the thermodynamic limit
Comparing the thermodynamic limit with a finite-N system size
Temperature overshooting during relaxation
HOW GENERIC IS THE MPEMBA EFFECT IN THE REM MODEL?
Analytical estimates
Numerically
E log2
DISCUSSION
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