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In nature, states of broken symmetry are found at all levels, from the microscopic to the macroscopic. The state of a physical system is determined by – depending on the level of description – atomic and molecular interactions or by irreversible thermodynamic processes. We speak of a ‘broken symmetry’ if the state does not have the symmetries of the interactions or the processes that determine it; transitions to such states are the symmetry-breaking transitions. From a thermodynamic viewpoint, symmetry-breaking transitions can occur in systems in equilibrium as well as systems far from equilibrium. In equilibrium systems, magnetic transitions in crystalline solids are the best known examples (Briss, 1964; Cracknell, 1975). In nonequilibrium systems, such transitions are known to occur in hydrodynamic, chemical and laser systems (Haken, 1977; Nicolis and Prigogine, 1977). A most striking example of a state of broken symmetry is the ‘state of life’. The chemistry of life has a definite handedness: all proteins are made of L-amino acids and DNA and RNA contain exclusively d-sugars (Miller and Orgel, 1974). Biochemical function depends very delicately on this molecular chirality. d-amino acids are a rarity and they occur only as polypeptides (Bentley, 1969). Though there are many conjectures, the processes that resulted in a transition to such a state of broken chiral symmetry have not yet been identified.
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