Entropy 2004, 6[1], 76-86
Entropy
ISSN 1099-4300
http://www.mdpi.org/entropy/

Modified Feynman ratchet with velocity-dependent fluctuations

Jack Denur

Electric & Gas Technology, Inc. 13636 Neutron Road, Dallas, Texas 75244-4410.
E-mail: [email protected], or [email protected]

Received: 2 July 2003 / Accepted: 10 December 2003 / Published: 15 March 2004

Abstract: The randomness of Brownian motion at thermodynamic equilibrium can be spontaneously broken by velocity-dependence of fluctuations, i.e., by dependence of values or probability distributions of fluctuating properties on Brownian-motional velocity. Such randomness-breaking can spontaneously obtain via interaction between Brownian-motional Doppler effects --- which manifest the required velocity-dependence --- and system geometrical asymmetry. A non random walk is thereby spontaneously superposed on Brownian motion, resulting in a systematic net drift velocity despite thermodynamic equilibrium. The time evolution of this systematic net drift velocity --- and of velocity probability density, force, and power output --- is derived for a velocity-dependent modification of Feynman's ratchet. We show that said spontaneous randomness-breaking, and consequent systematic net drift velocity, imply: bias from the Maxwellian of the system's velocity probability density, the force that tends to accelerate it, and its power output. Maximization, especially of power output, is discussed. Uncompensated decreases in total entropy, challenging the second law of thermodynamics, are thereby implied.

Keywords: second law of thermodynamics; spontaneous momentum flow; Feynman ratchet; velocity-dependent fluctuations; Doppler effect; nonrandom walk.

PACS codes: 05.40.Jc, 05.40.Fb, 02.50.Ga, 05.20.Dd, 02.50.Ey, 02.50.Cw

MSC 2000 codes: 60J10, 28D20, 60G50, 82B41, 82B40, 82B05.


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