Information Thermodynamics of Turing Patterns
ORAL
Abstract
We set up a rigorous thermodynamic description of reaction-diffusion systems driven out of equilibrium by time-dependent space-distributed chemostats. Building on the assumption of local equilibrium, nonequilibrium thermodynamic potentials are constructed exploiting the symmetries of the chemical network topology. It is shown that the canonical (resp. semigrand canonical) nonequilibrium free energy works as a Lyapunov function in the relaxation to equilibrium of a closed (resp. open) system and its variation provides the minimum amount of work needed to manipulate the species concentrations. The theory is used to study analytically the Turing pattern formation in a prototypical reaction-diffusion system, the one-dimensional Brusselator model, and to classify it as a genuine thermodynamic nonequilibrium phase transition. The framework paves the way to study the energy cost of pattern manipulation and information transmission in complex biochemical systems.
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Presenters
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Gianmaria Falasco
University of Luxembourg
Authors
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Gianmaria Falasco
University of Luxembourg
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Riccardo Rao
University of Luxembourg
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Massimiliano Esposito
University of Luxembourg