200 research outputs found

    Generalized model for dynamic percolation

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    We study the dynamics of a carrier, which performs a biased motion under the influence of an external field E, in an environment which is modeled by dynamic percolation and created by hard-core particles. The particles move randomly on a simple cubic lattice, constrained by hard-core exclusion, and they spontaneously annihilate and re-appear at some prescribed rates. Using decoupling of the third-order correlation functions into the product of the pairwise carrier-particle correlations we determine the density profiles of the "environment" particles, as seen from the stationary moving carrier, and calculate its terminal velocity, V_c, as the function of the applied field and other system parameters. We find that for sufficiently small driving forces the force exerted on the carrier by the "environment" particles shows a viscous-like behavior. An analog Stokes formula for such dynamic percolative environments and the corresponding friction coefficient are derived. We show that the density profile of the environment particles is strongly inhomogeneous: In front of the stationary moving carrier the density is higher than the average density, ρs\rho_s, and approaches the average value as an exponential function of the distance from the carrier. Past the carrier the local density is lower than ρs\rho_s and the relaxation towards ρs\rho_s may proceed differently depending on whether the particles number is or is not explicitly conserved.Comment: Latex, 32 pages, 4 ps-figures, submitted to PR

    Microscopic Model of Charge Carrier Transfer in Complex Media

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    We present a microscopic model of a charge carrier transfer under an action of a constant electric field in a complex medium. Generalizing previous theoretical approaches, we model the dynamical environment hindering the carrier motion by dynamic percolation, i.e., as a medium comprising particles which move randomly on a simple cubic lattice, constrained by hard-core exclusion, and may spontaneously annihilate and re-appear at some prescribed rates. We determine analytically the density profiles of the "environment" particles, as seen from the stationary moving charge carrier, and calculate its terminal velocity as the function of the applied field and other system parameters. We realize that for sufficiently small external fields the force exerted on the carrier by the "environment" particles shows a viscous-like behavior and define an analog of the Stokes formula for such dynamic percolative environments. The corresponding friction coefficient is also derived.Comment: appearing in Chem. Phys. Special Issue on Molecular Charge Transfer in Condensed Media - from Physics and Chemistry to Biology and Nano-Engineering, edited by A.Kornyshev (Imperial College London), M.Newton (Brookhaven Natl Lab) and J.Ulstrup (Technical University of Denmark

    Nature’s Optics and Our Understanding of Light

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    Optical phenomena visible to everyone abundantly illustrate important ideas in science and mathematics. The phenomena considered include rainbows, sparkling reflections on water, green flashes, earthlight on the moon, glories, daylight, crystals, and the squint moon. The concepts include refraction, wave interference, numerical experiments, asymptotics, Regge poles, polarisation singularities, conical intersections, and visual illusions

    Fractional Calculus and the Future of Science

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    Newton foresaw the limitations of geometry’s description of planetary behavior and developed fluxions (differentials) as the new language for celestial mechanics and as the way to implement his laws of mechanics. Two hundred years later Mandelbrot introduced the notion of fractals into the scientific lexicon of geometry, dynamics, and statistics and in so doing suggested ways to see beyond the limitations of Newton’s laws. Mandelbrot’s mathematical essays suggest how fractals may lead to the understanding of turbulence, viscoelasticity, and ultimately to end of dominance of the Newton’s macroscopic world view.Fractional Calculus and the Future of Science examines the nexus of these two game-changing contributions to our scientific understanding of the world. It addresses how non-integer differential equations replace Newton’s laws to describe the many guises of complexity, most of which lay beyond Newton’s experience, and many had even eluded Mandelbrot’s powerful intuition. The book’s authors look behind the mathematics and examine what must be true about a phenomenon’s behavior to justify the replacement of an integer-order with a noninteger-order (fractional) derivative. This window into the future of specific science disciplines using the fractional calculus lens suggests how what is seen entails a difference in scientific thinking and understanding

    Quantum dynamics in strong fluctuating fields

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    A large number of multifaceted quantum transport processes in molecular systems and physical nanosystems can be treated in terms of quantum relaxation processes which couple to one or several fluctuating environments. A thermal equilibrium environment can conveniently be modelled by a thermal bath of harmonic oscillators. An archetype situation provides a two-state dissipative quantum dynamics, commonly known under the label of a spin-boson dynamics. An interesting and nontrivial physical situation emerges, however, when the quantum dynamics evolves far away from thermal equilibrium. This occurs, for example, when a charge transferring medium possesses nonequilibrium degrees of freedom, or when a strong time-dependent control field is applied externally. Accordingly, certain parameters of underlying quantum subsystem acquire stochastic character. Herein, we review the general theoretical framework which is based on the method of projector operators, yielding the quantum master equations for systems that are exposed to strong external fields. This allows one to investigate on a common basis the influence of nonequilibrium fluctuations and periodic electrical fields on quantum transport processes. Most importantly, such strong fluctuating fields induce a whole variety of nonlinear and nonequilibrium phenomena. A characteristic feature of such dynamics is the absence of thermal (quantum) detailed balance.Comment: review article, Advances in Physics (2005), in pres

    Un cadre holistique de la modĂ©lisation de la dĂ©gradation pour l’analyse de fiabilitĂ© et optimisation de la maintenance de systĂšmes de sĂ©curitĂ© nuclĂ©aires

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    Components of nuclear safety systems are in general highly reliable, which leads to a difficulty in modeling their degradation and failure behaviors due to the limited amount of data available. Besides, the complexity of such modeling task is increased by the fact that these systems are often subject to multiple competing degradation processes and that these can be dependent under certain circumstances, and influenced by a number of external factors (e.g. temperature, stress, mechanical shocks, etc.). In this complicated problem setting, this PhD work aims to develop a holistic framework of models and computational methods for the reliability-based analysis and maintenance optimization of nuclear safety systems taking into account the available knowledge on the systems, degradation and failure behaviors, their dependencies, the external influencing factors and the associated uncertainties.The original scientific contributions of the work are: (1) For single components, we integrate random shocks into multi-state physics models for component reliability analysis, considering general dependencies between the degradation and two types of random shocks. (2) For multi-component systems (with a limited number of components):(a) a piecewise-deterministic Markov process modeling framework is developed to treat degradation dependency in a system whose degradation processes are modeled by physics-based models and multi-state models; (b) epistemic uncertainty due to incomplete or imprecise knowledge is considered and a finite-volume scheme is extended to assess the (fuzzy) system reliability; (c) the mean absolute deviation importance measures are extended for components with multiple dependent competing degradation processes and subject to maintenance; (d) the optimal maintenance policy considering epistemic uncertainty and degradation dependency is derived by combining finite-volume scheme, differential evolution and non-dominated sorting differential evolution; (e) the modeling framework of (a) is extended by including the impacts of random shocks on the dependent degradation processes.(3) For multi-component systems (with a large number of components), a reliability assessment method is proposed considering degradation dependency, by combining binary decision diagrams and Monte Carlo simulation to reduce computational costs.Composants de systĂšmes de sĂ»retĂ© nuclĂ©aire sont en gĂ©nĂ©ral trĂšs fiable, ce qui conduit Ă  une difficultĂ© de modĂ©liser leurs comportements de dĂ©gradation et d'Ă©chec en raison de la quantitĂ© limitĂ©e de donnĂ©es disponibles. Par ailleurs, la complexitĂ© de cette tĂąche de modĂ©lisation est augmentĂ©e par le fait que ces systĂšmes sont souvent l'objet de multiples processus concurrents de dĂ©gradation et que ceux-ci peut ĂȘtre dĂ©pendants dans certaines circonstances, et influencĂ© par un certain nombre de facteurs externes (par exemple la tempĂ©rature, le stress, les chocs mĂ©caniques, etc.).Dans ce cadre de problĂšme compliquĂ©, ce travail de thĂšse vise Ă  dĂ©velopper un cadre holistique de modĂšles et de mĂ©thodes de calcul pour l'analyse basĂ©e sur la fiabilitĂ© et la maintenance d'optimisation des systĂšmes de sĂ»retĂ© nuclĂ©aire en tenant compte des connaissances disponibles sur les systĂšmes, les comportements de dĂ©gradation et de dĂ©faillance, de leurs dĂ©pendances, les facteurs influençant externes et les incertitudes associĂ©es.Les contributions scientifiques originales dans la thĂšse sont:(1) Pour les composants simples, nous intĂ©grons des chocs alĂ©atoires dans les modĂšles de physique multi-Ă©tats pour l'analyse de la fiabilitĂ© des composants qui envisagent dĂ©pendances gĂ©nĂ©rales entre la dĂ©gradation et de deux types de chocs alĂ©atoires.(2) Pour les systĂšmes multi-composants (avec un nombre limitĂ© de composants):(a) un cadre de modĂ©lisation de processus de Markov dĂ©terministes par morceaux est dĂ©veloppĂ© pour traiter la dĂ©pendance de dĂ©gradation dans un systĂšme dont les processus de dĂ©gradation sont modĂ©lisĂ©es par des modĂšles basĂ©s sur la physique et des modĂšles multi-Ă©tats; (b) l'incertitude Ă©pistĂ©mique Ă  cause de la connaissance incomplĂšte ou imprĂ©cise est considĂ©rĂ© et une mĂ©thode volumes finis est prolongĂ©e pour Ă©valuer la fiabilitĂ© (floue) du systĂšme; (c) les mesures d'importance de l'Ă©cart moyen absolu sont Ă©tendues pour les composants avec multiples processus concurrents dĂ©pendants de dĂ©gradation et soumis Ă  l'entretien; (d) la politique optimale de maintenance compte tenu de l'incertitude Ă©pistĂ©mique et la dĂ©pendance de dĂ©gradation est dĂ©rivĂ© en combinant schĂ©ma volumes finis, Ă©volution diffĂ©rentielle et non-dominĂ©e de tri Ă©volution diffĂ©rentielle; (e) le cadre de la modĂ©lisation de (a) est Ă©tendu en incluant les impacts des chocs alĂ©atoires sur les processus dĂ©pendants de dĂ©gradation.(3) Pour les systĂšmes multi-composants (avec un grand nombre de composants), une mĂ©thode d'Ă©valuation de la fiabilitĂ© est proposĂ© considĂ©rant la dĂ©pendance dĂ©gradation en combinant des diagrammes de dĂ©cision binaires et simulation de Monte Carlo pour rĂ©duire le coĂ»t de calcul

    Ravenstein Revisited: The Analysis of Migration, Then and Now

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    In 1876, 1885 and 1889, Ernst Ravenstein, an Anglo-German geographer, published papers on internal and international migration in Britain, Europe and North America. He generalized his findings as “laws of migration”, which have informed subsequent migration research. This paper aims to compare Ravenstein’s approach to investigating migration with how researchers have studied the phenomenon more recently. Ravenstein used lifetime migrant tables for counties from the 1871 and 1881 censuses of the British Isles. Data on lifetime migrants are still routinely collected but, because of the indeterminate time interval, they are rarely used to study internal migration. Today, internal migration measures from alternative sources are used to measure internal migration: fixed interval migrant data from censuses and surveys, continuous records of migrations from registers, and “big data” from telecommunications and internet companies. Ravenstein described and mapped county-level lifetime migration patterns, using the concepts of “absorption” and “dispersion”, using migration rates and net balances. Recently, researchers have used lifetime migrant stocks from consecutive censuses to estimate country to country flows for the world. In the last decade, an Australian-led team has built an international database of internal migration flow data and summary measures. Methods were developed to investigate the modifiable areal unit problem (MAUP), in order to design summary internal migration measures comparable across countries. Indicators of internal migration were produced for countries covering 80 percent of the world’s population. Ravenstein observed that most migrants moved only short distances, anticipating the development of “gravity” models of migration. Recent studies calibrated the relationship between migration and distance, using gravity models. For mid-19th century Britain, Ravenstein found the dominant direction of internal migration to be towards the “centres of commerce and industry”. Urbanization is still the dominant flow direction in most countries, though, late in the process, suburbanization, counter-urbanization and re-urbanization can occur. Ravenstein focussed on place-specific migration, whereas today researchers describe migration flows using area typologies, seeking spatial generality. Ravenstein said little about migrant attributes except that women migrated more than men. In recent decades, the behaviour of migrants by age, sex, education, ethnicity, social class and partnership status have been studied intensively, using microdata from censuses and surveys. Knowledge about processes influencing internal and international migration has rarely been built into demographic projections. Scenarios that link migration with sub-national or national inequalities and with climate or environmental change are influencing the design of policies to reduce inequalities or slow global warming

    Quantum optimal control in quantum technologies. Strategic report on current status, visions and goals for research in Europe

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    Quantum optimal control, a toolbox for devising and implementing the shapes of external fields that accomplish given tasks in the operation of a quantum device in the best way possible, has evolved into one of the cornerstones for enabling quantum technologies. The last few years have seen a rapid evolution and expansion of the field. We review here recent progress in our understanding of the controllability of open quantum systems and in the development and application of quantum control techniques to quantum technologies. We also address key challenges and sketch a roadmap for future developments.Comment: this is a living document - we welcome feedback and discussio

    Advances in Computer Science and Engineering

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    The book Advances in Computer Science and Engineering constitutes the revised selection of 23 chapters written by scientists and researchers from all over the world. The chapters cover topics in the scientific fields of Applied Computing Techniques, Innovations in Mechanical Engineering, Electrical Engineering and Applications and Advances in Applied Modeling
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