%0 Journal Article %A FernΓ‘ndez Álvarez-Estrada, RamΓ³n %T Approach to equilibrium of statistical systems: classical particles and quantum fields off-equilibrium %D 2023 %U https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14352/102714 %X Non-equilibrium evolution at absolute temperature T and approach to equilibrium of statistical systems in long-time (t) approximations, using both hierarchies and functional integrals, are reviewed. A classical non-relativistic particle in one spatial dimension, subject to a potential and a heat bath (β„Žπ‘), is described by the non-equilibrium reversible Liouville distribution (W) and equation, with a suitable initial condition. The Boltzmann equilibrium distribution π‘Š_(π‘’π‘ž) generates orthogonal (Hermite) polynomials 𝐻_(𝑛) in momenta. Suitable moments π‘Š_(𝑛) of W (using the 𝐻_(𝑛)’s) yield a non-equilibrium three-term hierarchy (different from the standard Bogoliubov–Born–Green–Kirkwood–Yvon one), solved through operator continued fractions. After a long-t approximation, the π‘Š_(𝑛)’s yield irreversibly approach to equilibrium. The approach is extended (without β„Žπ‘) to: (i) a non-equilibrium system of N classical non-relativistic particles interacting through repulsive short range potentials and (ii) a classical πœ™^(4) field theory (without β„Žπ‘). The extension to one non-relativistic quantum particle (with β„Žπ‘) employs the non-equilibrium Wigner function (π‘Š_(𝑄)): difficulties related to non-positivity of π‘Š_(𝑄) are bypassed so as to formulate approximately approach to equilibrium. A non-equilibrium quantum anharmonic oscillator is analyzed differently, through functional integral methods. The latter allows an extension to relativistic quantum πœ™^(4) field theory (a meson gas off-equilibrium, without β„Žπ‘), facing ultraviolet divergences and renormalization. Genuine simplifications of quantum πœ™^(4) theory at high T and large distances and long t occur; then, through a new argument for the field-theoretic case, the theory can be approximated by a classical πœ™^(4) one, yielding an approach to equilibrium. %~