Universal Thermodynamic Bounds on Nonequilibrium Response with Biochemical Applications

Diverse physical systems are characterized by their response to small perturbations. Near thermodynamic equilibrium, the fluctuation-dissipation theorem provides a powerful theoretical and experimental tool to determine the nature of response by observing spontaneous equilibrium fluctuations. In thi...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Owen, Jeremy Andrew (Author), Gingrich, Todd R. (Author), Horowitz, Jordan M. (Author)
Other Authors: Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Physics (Contributor)
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: American Physical Society (APS), 2020-07-08T19:52:06Z.
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Summary:Diverse physical systems are characterized by their response to small perturbations. Near thermodynamic equilibrium, the fluctuation-dissipation theorem provides a powerful theoretical and experimental tool to determine the nature of response by observing spontaneous equilibrium fluctuations. In this spirit, we derive here a collection of equalities and inequalities valid arbitrarily far from equilibrium that constrain the response of nonequilibrium steady states in terms of the strength of nonequilibrium driving. Our work opens new avenues for characterizing nonequilibrium response. As illustrations, we show how our results rationalize the energetic requirements of common biochemical motifs. Keywords: Nonequilibrium and irreversible thermodyanmics; nonequilibrium statistical mechanics; Thermodynamics; Biological networks; Nonequilibrium systems; Master equation