208 research outputs found
Escape from attracting sets in randomly perturbed systems
The dynamics of escape from an attractive state due to random perturbations
is of central interest to many areas in science. Previous studies of escape in
chaotic systems have rather focused on the case of unbounded noise, usually
assumed to have Gaussian distribution. In this paper, we address the problem of
escape induced by bounded noise. We show that the dynamics of escape from an
attractor's basin is equivalent to that of a closed system with an
appropriately chosen "hole". Using this equivalence, we show that there is a
minimum noise amplitude above which escape takes place, and we derive
analytical expressions for the scaling of the escape rate with noise amplitude
near the escape transition. We verify our analytical predictions through
numerical simulations of a two-dimensional map with noise.Comment: up to date with published versio
Signatures of fractal clustering of aerosols advected under gravity
Aerosols under chaotic advection often approach a strange attractor. They
move chaotically on this fractal set but, in the presence of gravity, they have
a net vertical motion downwards. In practical situations, observational data
may be available only at a given level, for example at the ground level. We
uncover two fractal signatures of chaotic advection of aerosols under the
action of gravity. Each one enables the computation of the fractal dimension
of the strange attractor governing the advection dynamics from data
obtained solely at a given level. We illustrate our theoretical findings with a
numerical experiment and discuss their possible relevance to meteorology.Comment: Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. E (Rapid Communications
Integrated stress response of Escherichia coli to methylglyoxal : transcriptional readthrough from the nemRA operon enhances protection through increased expression of glyoxalase I
© 2013 The Authors. Molecular Microbiology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.Peer reviewedPublisher PD
Output functions and fractal dimensions in dynamical systems
We present a novel method for the calculation of the fractal dimension of
boundaries in dynamical systems, which is in many cases many orders of
magnitude more efficient than the uncertainty method. We call it the Output
Function Evaluation (OFE) method. The OFE method is based on an efficient
scheme for computing output functions, such as the escape time, on a
one-dimensional portion of the phase space. We show analytically that the OFE
method is much more efficient than the uncertainty method for boundaries with
, where is the dimension of the intersection of the boundary with a
one-dimensional manifold. We apply the OFE method to a scattering system, and
compare it to the uncertainty method. We use the OFE method to study the
behavior of the fractal dimension as the system's dynamics undergoes a
topological transition.Comment: Uses REVTEX; to be published in Phys. Rev. Let
The role of asymmetries in rock-paper-scissors biodiversity models.
The maintenance of biodiversity is a long standing puzzle in ecology. It is a classical result that if the interactions of the species in an ecosystem are chosen in a random way, then complex ecosystems can't sustain themselves, meaning that the structure of the interactions between the species must be a central component on the preservation of biodiversity and on the stability of ecosystems. The rock-paper-scissors model is one of the paradigmatic models that study how biodiversity is maintained. In this model 3 species dominate each other in a cyclic way (mimicking a trophic cycle), that is, rock dominates scissors, that dominates paper, that dominates rock. In the original version of this model, this dominance obeys a 'Z IND 3' symmetry, in the sense that the strength of dominance is always the same. In this work, we break this symmetry, studying the effects of the addition of an asymmetry parameter. In the usual model, in a two dimensional lattice, the species distribute themselves according to spiral patterns, that can be explained by the complex Landau-Guinzburg equation. With the addition of asymmetry, new spatial patterns appear during the transient and the system either ends in a state with spirals, similar to the ones of the original model, or in a state where unstable spatial patterns dominate or in a state where only one species survives (and biodiversity is lost)
Onset of chaotic advection in open flows
Non peer reviewedPublisher PD
High-Resolution Replication Profiles Define the Stochastic Nature of Genome Replication Initiation and Termination
Copyright © 2013 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.Peer reviewedPublisher PD
Emerging attractors and the transition from dissipative to conservative dynamics
The topological structure of basin boundaries plays a fundamental role in the
sensitivity to the initial conditions in chaotic dynamical systems. Herewith we
present a study on the dynamics of dissipative systems close to the Hamiltonian
limit, emphasising the increasing number of periodic attractors and on the
structural changes in their basin boundaries as the dissipation approaches
zero. We show numerically that a power law with nontrivial exponent describes
the growth of the total number of periodic attractors as the damping is
decreased. We also establish that for small scales the dynamics is governed by
\emph{effective} dynamical invariants, whose measure depends not only on the
region of the phase space, but also on the scale under consideration.
Therefore, our results show that the concept of effective invariants is also
relevant for dissipative systems.Comment: 9 pages, 10 figures. Accepted and in press for PR
Random fluctuation leads to forbidden escape of particles
A great number of physical processes are described within the context of
Hamiltonian scattering. Previous studies have rather been focused on
trajectories starting outside invariant structures, since the ones starting
inside are expected to stay trapped there forever. This is true though only for
the deterministic case. We show however that, under finitely small random
fluctuations of the field, trajectories starting inside Arnold-Kolmogorov-Moser
(KAM) islands escape within finite time. The non-hyperbolic dynamics gains then
hyperbolic characteristics due to the effect of the random perturbed field. As
a consequence, trajectories which are started inside KAM curves escape with
hyperbolic-like time decay distribution, and the fractal dimension of a set of
particles that remain in the scattering region approaches that for hyperbolic
systems. We show a universal quadratic power law relating the exponential decay
to the amplitude of noise. We present a random walk model to relate this
distribution to the amplitude of noise, and investigate this phenomena with a
numerical study applying random maps.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figures - Up to date with corrections suggested by
referee
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