2,572 research outputs found
Geometric erogdicity of a bead-spring pair with stochastic Stokes forcing
We consider a simple model for the
uctuating hydrodynamics of a
exible polymer
in dilute solution, demonstrating geometric ergodicity for a pair of particles that interact with each other through a nonlinear spring potential while being advected by a
stochastic Stokes
uid velocity field. This is a generalization of previous models which
have used linear spring forces as well as white-in-time
uid velocity fields.
We follow previous work combining control theoretic arguments, Lyapunov functions, and hypo-elliptic diffusion theory to prove exponential convergence via a Harris
chain argument. To this, we add the possibility of excluding certain "bad" sets in phase
space in which the assumptions are violated but from which the systems leaves with a
controllable probability. This allows for the treatment of singular drifts, such as those
derived from the Lennard-Jones potential, which is an novel feature of this work
Seemingly stable chemical kinetics can be stable, marginally stable or unstable
We present three examples of chemical reaction networks whose ordinary differential equation scaling limits are almost identical and in all cases stable. Nevertheless, the Markov jump processes associated to these reaction networks display the full range of behaviors: one is stable (positive recurrent), one is unstable (transient) and one is marginally stable (null recurrent). We study these differences and characterize the invariant measures by Lyapunov function techniques. In particular, we design a natural set of such functions which scale homogeneously to infinity, taking advantage of the same scaling behavior of the reaction rates
Two-dimensional gravity with a dynamical aether
We investigate the two-dimensional behavior of gravity coupled to a dynamical
unit timelike vector field, i.e. "Einstein-aether theory". The classical
solutions of this theory in two dimensions depend on one coupling constant.
When this coupling is positive the only solutions are (i) flat spacetime with
constant aether, (ii) de Sitter or anti-de Sitter spacetimes with a uniformly
accelerated unit vector invariant under a two-dimensional subgroup of SO(2,1)
generated by a boost and a null rotation, and (iii) a non-constant curvature
spacetime that has no Killing symmetries and contains singularities. In this
case the sign of the curvature is determined by whether the coupling is less or
greater than one. When instead the coupling is negative only solutions (i) and
(iii) are present. This classical study of the behavior of Einstein-aether
theory in 1+1 dimensions may provide a starting point for further
investigations into semiclassical and fully quantum toy models of quantum
gravity with a dynamical preferred frame.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figure
The Theory of a Quantum Noncanonical Field in Curved Spacetimes
Much attention has been recently devoted to the possibility that quantum
gravity effects could lead to departures from Special Relativity in the form of
a deformed Poincar\`e algebra. These proposals go generically under the name of
Doubly or Deformed Special Relativity (DSR). In this article we further explore
a recently proposed class of quantum field theories, involving noncanonically
commuting complex scalar fields, which have been shown to entail a DSR-like
symmetry. An open issue for such theories is whether the DSR-like symmetry has
to be taken as a physically relevant symmetry, or if in fact the "true"
symmetries of the theory are just rotations and translations while boost
invariance has to be considered broken. We analyze here this issue by extending
the known results to curved spacetime under both of the previous assumptions.
We show that if the symmetry of the free theory is taken to be a DSR-like
realization of the Poincar\'e symmetry, then it is not possible to render such
a symmetry a gauge symmetry of the curved physical spacetime. However, it is
possible to introduce an auxiliary spacetime which allows to describe the
theory as a standard quantum field theory in curved spacetime. Alternatively,
taking the point of view that the noncanonical commutation of the fields
actually implies a breakdown of boost invariance, the physical spacetime
manifold has to be foliated in surfaces of simultaneity and the field theory
can be coupled to gravity by making use of the ADM prescription.Comment: 9 pages, no figure
Numerical simulations of gravitational collapse in Einstein-aether theory
We study gravitational collapse of a spherically symmetric scalar field in
Einstein-aether theory (general relativity coupled to a dynamical unit timelike
vector field). The initial value formulation is developed, and numerical
simulations are performed. The collapse produces regular, stationary black
holes, as long as the aether coupling constants are not too large. For larger
couplings a finite area singularity occurs. These results are shown to be
consistent with the stationary solutions found previously.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figures; v2: corrected typos, added minor clarifying
remarks, improved discussion of results in conclusio
Limits to differences in active and passive charges
We explore consequences of a hypothetical difference between active charges,
which generate electric fields, and passive charges, which respond to them. A
confrontation to experiments using atoms, molecules, or macroscopic matter
yields limits on their fractional difference at levels down to 10^-21, which at
the same time corresponds to an experimental confirmation of Newtons third law.Comment: 6 pages Revtex. To appear in Phys. Rev.
Deformed Special Relativity as an effective theory of measurements on quantum gravitational backgrounds
In this article we elaborate on a recently proposed interpretation of DSR as
an effective measurement theory in the presence of non-negligible (albeit
small) quantum gravitational fluctuations. We provide several heuristic
arguments to explain how such a new theory can emerge and discuss the possible
observational consequences of this framework.Comment: 11 pages, no figure
- …