Kawasaki dynamics in continuum: micro- and mesoscopic descriptions

Abstract

The dynamics of an infinite system of point particles in Rd, which hop and interact with each other, is described at both micro- and mesoscopic levels. The states of the system are probability measures on the space of configurations of particles. For a bounded time interval [0,T), the evolution of states μ0 μt is shown to hold in a space of sub-Poissonian measures. This result is obtained by: (a) solving equations for correlation functions, which yields the evolution k0 kt, t∈ [0,T), in a scale of Banach spaces; (b) proving that each kt is a correlation function for a unique measure μt. The mesoscopic theory is based on a Vlasov-type scaling, that yields a mean-field-like approximate description in terms of the particles' density which obeys a kinetic equation. The latter equation is rigorously derived from that for the correlation functions by the scaling procedure. We prove that the kinetic equation has a unique solution t, t∈ [0,+∞).

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