Self-propulsion noise statistics define speed limits on non-equilibrium transitions in active matter, with non-stationary initials allowing faster cooling than passive protocols.
Inverse engineering of cooling protocols: from normal behavior to Mpemba effects
2 Pith papers cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.
abstract
When a cup of hot coffee is suddenly put into a cold environment, it cools down as a function of time $t$ until the internal temperature $T_\text{int}$ of the coffee equals the external ambient temperature $T_\text{ext}$. This instantaneous shock-freezing corresponds to an imposed cooling protocol of the external temperature $T_\text{ext}(t)$, ideally described as a step-function in time, causing the time-dependent change of the internal temperature $T_\text{int}(t)$. While the effect of different given protocols $T_\text{ext}(t)$ on the resulting system cooling behaviour, embodied in $T_\text{int}(t)$, has been studied extensively, we consider here the inverse question: for a given system cooling $T_\text{int}(t)$ how can an appropriate protocol $T_\text{ext}(t)$ be engineered to produce the desired prescribed $T_\text{int}(t)$. We use both the phenomenological Newtonian equation for cooling and microscopic models, such as a discrete two-level system and a Brownian harmonic oscillator with time-dependent noise, to compute analytically the protocol $T_\text{ext}(t)$ needed to achieve a prescribed $T_\text{int}(t)$. We then discuss the same question for phenomenological generalizations of the Newtonian law which include anomalous Mpemba effects, overcooling, asymmetries in cooling and heating as well as delay phenomena. It is shown that backward-engineered protocols do not always exist and can be non-unique. The results are important for steering the cooling behavior by time-varying external heat sources in a systematic way.
fields
cond-mat.stat-mech 2years
2026 2representative citing papers
Analytical expressions are derived for external temperature protocols that produce any prescribed internal temperature trajectory using Newtonian cooling and microscopic models, including cases with Mpemba effects.
citing papers explorer
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Self-propulsion protocols for swift non-equilibrium state transitions and enhanced cooling in active systems
Self-propulsion noise statistics define speed limits on non-equilibrium transitions in active matter, with non-stationary initials allowing faster cooling than passive protocols.
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Inverse engineering of cooling protocols: from normal behavior to Mpemba effects
Analytical expressions are derived for external temperature protocols that produce any prescribed internal temperature trajectory using Newtonian cooling and microscopic models, including cases with Mpemba effects.