266 research outputs found
Peeling Bifurcations of Toroidal Chaotic Attractors
Chaotic attractors with toroidal topology (van der Pol attractor) have
counterparts with symmetry that exhibit unfamiliar phenomena. We investigate
double covers of toroidal attractors, discuss changes in their morphology under
correlated peeling bifurcations, describe their topological structures and the
changes undergone as a symmetry axis crosses the original attractor, and
indicate how the symbol name of a trajectory in the original lifts to one in
the cover. Covering orbits are described using a powerful synthesis of kneading
theory with refinements of the circle map. These methods are applied to a
simple version of the van der Pol oscillator.Comment: 7 pages, 14 figures, accepted to Physical Review
Sampling rare fluctuations of height in the Oslo ricepile model
We have studied large deviations of the height of the pile from its mean
value in the Oslo ricepile model. We sampled these very rare events with
probabilities of order by Monte Carlo simulations using importance
sampling. These simulations check our qualitative arguement [Phys. Rev. E, {\bf
73}, 021303, 2006] that in steady state of the Oslo ricepile model, the
probability of large negative height fluctuations about
the mean varies as as with
held fixed, and .Comment: 7 pages, 8 figure
Expanding direction of the period doubling operator
We prove that the period doubling operator has an expanding direction at the
fixed point. We use the induced operator, a ``Perron-Frobenius type operator'',
to study the linearization of the period doubling operator at its fixed point.
We then use a sequence of linear operators with finite ranks to study this
induced operator. The proof is constructive. One can calculate the expanding
direction and the rate of expansion of the period doubling operator at the
fixed point
Chaotic properties of quantum many-body systems in the thermodynamic limit
By using numerical simulations, we investigate the dynamics of a quantum
system of interacting bosons. We find an increase of properly defined mixing
properties when the number of particles increases at constant density or the
interaction strength drives the system away from integrability. A
correspondence with the dynamical chaoticity of an associated -number system
is then used to infer properties of the quantum system in the thermodynamic
limit.Comment: 4 pages RevTeX, 4 postscript figures included with psfig; Completely
restructured version with new results on mixing properties added
The Wigner-Yanase entropy is not subadditive
Wigner and Yanase introduced in 1963 the Wigner-Yanase entropy defined as
minus the skew information of a state with respect to a conserved observable.
They proved that the Wigner-Yanase entropy is a concave function in the state
and conjectured that it is subadditive with respect to the aggregation of
possibly interacting subsystems. While this turned out to be true for the
quantum-mechanical entropy, we negate the conjecture for the Wigner-Yanase
entropy by providing a counter example.Comment: To appear in Journal of Statistical Physic
Metastability and Nucleation for the Blume-Capel Model. Different mechanisms of transition
We study metastability and nucleation for the Blume-Capel model: a
ferromagnetic nearest neighbour two-dimensional lattice system with spin
variables taking values in -1,0,+1. We consider large but finite volume, small
fixed magnetic field h and chemical potential "lambda" in the limit of zero
temperature; we analyze the first excursion from the metastable -1
configuration to the stable +1 configuration. We compute the asymptotic
behaviour of the transition time and describe the typical tube of trajectories
during the transition. We show that, unexpectedly, the mechanism of transition
changes abruptly when the line h=2*lambda is crossed.Comment: 96 pages, 44 tex-figures, 7 postscript figure
Rigorous Analysis of Singularities and Absence of Analytic Continuation at First Order Phase Transition Points in Lattice Spin Models
We report about two new rigorous results on the non-analytic properties of
thermodynamic potentials at first order phase transition. The first one is
valid for lattice models () with arbitrary finite state space, and
finite-range interactions which have two ground states. Under the only
assumption that the Peierls Condition is satisfied for the ground states and
that the temperature is sufficiently low, we prove that the pressure has no
analytic continuation at the first order phase transition point. The second
result concerns Ising spins with Kac potentials
, where is a small scaling
parameter, and a fixed finite range potential. In this framework, we
relate the non-analytic behaviour of the pressure at the transition point to
the range of interaction, which equals . Our analysis exhibits a
crossover between the non-analytic behaviour of finite range models
() and analyticity in the mean field limit (). In
general, the basic mechanism responsible for the appearance of a singularity
blocking the analytic continuation is that arbitrarily large droplets of the
other phase become stable at the transition point.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Translation-invariance of two-dimensional Gibbsian point processes
The conservation of translation as a symmetry in two-dimensional systems with
interaction is a classical subject of statistical mechanics. Here we establish
such a result for Gibbsian particle systems with two-body interaction, where
the interesting cases of singular, hard-core and discontinuous interaction are
included. We start with the special case of pure hard core repulsion in order
to show how to treat hard cores in general.Comment: 44 pages, 6 figure
Classical Helium Atom with Radiation Reaction
We study a classical model of Helium atom in which, in addition to the
Coulomb forces, the radiation reaction forces are taken into account. This
modification brings in the model a new qualitative feature of a global
character. Indeed, as pointed out by Dirac, in any model of classical
electrodynamics of point particles involving radiation reaction one has to
eliminate, from the a priori conceivable solutions of the problem, those
corresponding to the emission of an infinite amount of energy. We show that the
Dirac prescription solves a problem of inconsistency plaguing all available
models which neglect radiation reaction, namely, the fact that in all such
models most initial data lead to a spontaneous breakdown of the atom. A further
modification is that the system thus acquires a peculiar form of dissipation.
In particular, this makes attractive an invariant manifold of special physical
interest, the zero--dipole manifold, that corresponds to motions in which no
energy is radiated away (in the dipole approximation). We finally study
numerically the invariant measure naturally induced by the time--evolution on
such a manifold, and this corresponds to studying the formation process of the
atom. Indications are given that such a measure may be singular with respect to
that of Lebesgue.Comment: 16 pages, 3 figure
Rigorous Derivation of the Phase Shift Formula for the Hilbert Space Scattering Operator of a Single Particle
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