413 research outputs found
The Effect of Radiation on the Stochastic Web
A charged particle circling in a uniform magnetic field and kicked by an
electric field is considered. Under the assumption of small magnetic field, an
iterative map is developed. Comparison between the (relativistic) non-radiative
case and the (relativistic) radiative case shows that in both cases one can
observe a stochastic web structure, and that both cases are qualitatively
similar.Comment: 8 Revtex pages including 4 figure
Complexity, Tunneling and Geometrical Symmetry
It is demonstrated in the context of the simple one-dimensional example of a
barrier in an infinite well, that highly complex behavior of the time evolution
of a wave function is associated with the almost degeneracy of levels in the
process of tunneling. Degenerate conditions are obtained by shifting the
position of the barrier. The complexity strength depends on the number of
almost degenerate levels which depend on geometrical symmetry. The presence of
complex behavior is studied to establish correlation with spectral degeneracy.Comment: 9 revtex pages, 6 Postscript figures (uuencoded
Nonlinear Volatility of River Flux Fluctuations
We study the spectral properties of the magnitudes of river flux increments,
the volatility. The volatility series exhibits (i) strong seasonal periodicity
and (ii) strongly power-law correlations for time scales less than one year. We
test the nonlinear properties of the river flux increment series by randomizing
its Fourier phases and find that the surrogate volatility series (i) has almost
no seasonal periodicity and (ii) is weakly correlated for time scales less than
one year. We quantify the degree of nonlinearity by measuring (i) the amplitude
of the power spectrum at the seasonal peak and (ii) the correlation power-law
exponent of the volatility series.Comment: 5 revtex pages, 6 page
The Necessity for a Time Local Dimension in Systems with Time Varying Attractors
We show that a simple non-linear system of ordinary differential equations
may possess a time varying attractor dimension. This indicates that it is
infeasible to characterize EEG and MEG time series with a single time global
dimension. We suggest another measure for the description of non-stationary
attractors.Comment: 13 Postscript pages, 12 Postscript figures (figures 3b and 4 by
request from Y. Ashkenazy: [email protected]
Discrimination of the Healthy and Sick Cardiac Autonomic Nervous System by a New Wavelet Analysis of Heartbeat Intervals
We demonstrate that it is possible to distinguish with a complete certainty
between healthy subjects and patients with various dysfunctions of the cardiac
nervous system by way of multiresolutional wavelet transform of RR intervals.
We repeated the study of Thurner et al on different ensemble of subjects. We
show that reconstructed series using a filter which discards wavelet
coefficients related with higher scales enables one to classify individuals for
which the method otherwise is inconclusive. We suggest a delimiting diagnostic
value of the standard deviation of the filtered, reconstructed RR interval time
series in the range of (for the above mentioned filter), below
which individuals are at risk.Comment: 5 latex pages (including 6 figures). Accepted in Fractal
Correlation Differences in Heartbeat Fluctuations During Rest and Exercise
We study the heartbeat activity of healthy individuals at rest and during
exercise. We focus on correlation properties of the intervals formed by
successive peaks in the pulse wave and find significant scaling differences
between rest and exercise. For exercise the interval series is anticorrelated
at short time scales and correlated at intermediate time scales, while for rest
we observe the opposite crossover pattern -- from strong correlations in the
short-time regime to weaker correlations at larger scales. We suggest a
physiologically motivated stochastic scenario to explain the scaling
differences between rest and exercise and the observed crossover patterns.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Calculation of energy spectrum and eigenstates of 1D time-independent short-range potentials
Abstract We show that it is possible to approximate 1D time-independent short-range potentials by a sum of function potentials. By the use of transfer matrix techniques it is possible to calculate the total transfer matrix as well as the S matrix which connects the incoming waves to the outgoing waves. The transmission coe cient and the resonance states can be evaluated by the function approximation. Using the same approach in potential wells, the energy spectrum, as well as the eigenfunctions of the well, can be constructed. We examine the approximation, successfully, on two well-known potentials, the square-well and the harmonic oscillator. c 2001 Published by Elsevier Science B.V
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