This paper develops a nonasymptotic,
local approach to quantitative propagation
of chaos for a wide class of mean field diffusive dynamics. For a system of
interacting particles, the relative entropy between the marginal law of
particles and its limiting product measure is shown to be
at
each time, as long as the same is true at time zero. A simple Gaussian example shows
that this rate is optimal. The main assumption is that the limiting measure
obeys a certain functional inequality, which is shown to encompass many
potentially irregular but not too singular finite-range interactions, as well as some
infinite-range interactions. This unifies the previously disparate cases of Lipschitz
versus bounded measurable interactions, improving the best prior bounds of
which were deduced from
global estimates involving all
particles. We also cover a class of models for which qualitative propagation
of chaos and even well-posedness of the McKean–Vlasov equation were
previously unknown. At the center of our new approach is a differential
inequality, derived from a form of the BBGKY hierarchy, which bounds the
-particle entropy in
terms of the
-particle
entropy.