Correlations in nonequilibrium diffusive systems Garrido Galera, Pedro Luis ACKNOWLEDGMENTS This work is part of the Project of I+D+i Ref. No. PID2020-113681GB-I00, financed by MICIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033 and FEDER “A way to make Europe.” We study the behavior of stationary nonequilibrium two-body correlation functions for diffusive systems with equilibrium reference states (DSe). We describe a DSe at the mesoscopic level by M locally conserved continuum fields that evolve through coupled Langevin equations with white noises. The dynamic is designed such that the system may reach equilibrium states for a set of boundary conditions. In this form, we make the system driven to a nonequilibrium stationary state by changing the equilibrium boundary conditions. We decompose the correlations in a known local equilibrium part and another one that contains the nonequilibrium behavior and that we call correlation's excess ¯¯¯C(x,z). We formally derive the differential equations for ¯¯¯C. To solve them order by order, we define a perturbative expansion around the equilibrium state. We show that the ¯¯¯C's first-order expansion, ¯¯¯C(1), is always zero for the unique field case, M=1. Moreover, ¯¯¯C(1) is always long range or zero when M>1. We obtain the surprising result that their associated fluctuations, the space integrals of ¯¯¯C(1), are always zero. Therefore, fluctuations are dominated by local equilibrium up to second order in the perturbative expansion around the equilibrium. We derive the behaviors of ¯¯¯C(1) in real space for dimensions d=1 and 2 explicitly. Finally, we derive the two first perturbative orders of the correlation's excess for a generic M=2 case and a hydrodynamic model. 2022-09-28T11:01:17Z 2022-09-28T11:01:17Z 2022-08-08 journal article P. L. Garrido. Correlations in nonequilibrium diffusive systems. Phys. Rev. E 106, 024107 [https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevE.106.024107] https://hdl.handle.net/10481/77048 10.1103/PhysRevE.106.024107 eng http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ open access Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 Internacional American Physical Society