3,438 research outputs found
Rituals of an African Zionist Church
African Studies Seminar series. Paper presented December 1967
The effect of additive noise on dynamical hysteresis
We investigate the properties of hysteresis cycles produced by a
one-dimensional, periodically forced Langevin equation. We show that depending
on amplitude and frequency of the forcing and on noise intensity, there are
three qualitatively different types of hysteresis cycles. Below a critical
noise intensity, the random area enclosed by hysteresis cycles is concentrated
near the deterministic area, which is different for small and large driving
amplitude. Above this threshold, the area of typical hysteresis cycles depends,
to leading order, only on the noise intensity. In all three regimes, we derive
mathematically rigorous estimates for expectation, variance, and the
probability of deviations of the hysteresis area from its typical value.Comment: 30 pages, 5 figure
Memory Effects and Scaling Laws in Slowly Driven Systems
This article deals with dynamical systems depending on a slowly varying
parameter. We present several physical examples illustrating memory effects,
such as metastability and hysteresis, which frequently appear in these systems.
A mathematical theory is outlined, which allows to show existence of hysteresis
cycles, and determine related scaling laws.Comment: 28 pages (AMS-LaTeX), 18 PS figure
Universality of residence-time distributions in non-adiabatic stochastic resonance
We present mathematically rigorous expressions for the residence-time and
first-passage-time distributions of a periodically forced Brownian particle in
a bistable potential. For a broad range of forcing frequencies and amplitudes,
the distributions are close to periodically modulated exponential ones.
Remarkably, the periodic modulations are governed by universal functions,
depending on a single parameter related to the forcing period. The behaviour of
the distributions and their moments is analysed, in particular in the low- and
high-frequency limits.Comment: 8 pages, 1 figure New version includes distinction between
first-passage-time and residence-time distribution
Beyond the Fokker-Planck equation: Pathwise control of noisy bistable systems
We introduce a new method, allowing to describe slowly time-dependent
Langevin equations through the behaviour of individual paths. This approach
yields considerably more information than the computation of the probability
density. The main idea is to show that for sufficiently small noise intensity
and slow time dependence, the vast majority of paths remain in small space-time
sets, typically in the neighbourhood of potential wells. The size of these sets
often has a power-law dependence on the small parameters, with universal
exponents. The overall probability of exceptional paths is exponentially small,
with an exponent also showing power-law behaviour. The results cover time spans
up to the maximal Kramers time of the system. We apply our method to three
phenomena characteristic for bistable systems: stochastic resonance, dynamical
hysteresis and bifurcation delay, where it yields precise bounds on transition
probabilities, and the distribution of hysteresis areas and first-exit times.
We also discuss the effect of coloured noise.Comment: 37 pages, 11 figure
Metastability in Interacting Nonlinear Stochastic Differential Equations II: Large-N Behaviour
We consider the dynamics of a periodic chain of N coupled overdamped
particles under the influence of noise, in the limit of large N. Each particle
is subjected to a bistable local potential, to a linear coupling with its
nearest neighbours, and to an independent source of white noise. For strong
coupling (of the order N^2), the system synchronises, in the sense that all
oscillators assume almost the same position in their respective local potential
most of the time. In a previous paper, we showed that the transition from
strong to weak coupling involves a sequence of symmetry-breaking bifurcations
of the system's stationary configurations, and analysed in particular the
behaviour for coupling intensities slightly below the synchronisation
threshold, for arbitrary N. Here we describe the behaviour for any positive
coupling intensity \gamma of order N^2, provided the particle number N is
sufficiently large (as a function of \gamma/N^2). In particular, we determine
the transition time between synchronised states, as well as the shape of the
"critical droplet", to leading order in 1/N. Our techniques involve the control
of the exact number of periodic orbits of a near-integrable twist map, allowing
us to give a detailed description of the system's potential landscape, in which
the metastable behaviour is encoded
Relating the Cosmological Constant and Supersymmetry Breaking in Warped Compactifications of IIB String Theory
It has been suggested that the observed value of the cosmological constant is
related to the supersymmetry breaking scale M_{susy} through the formula Lambda
\sim M_p^4 (M_{susy}/M_p)^8. We point out that a similar relation naturally
arises in the codimension two solutions of warped space-time varying
compactifications of string theory in which non-isotropic stringy moduli induce
a small but positive cosmological constant.Comment: 7 pages, LaTeX, references added and minor changes made, (v3) map
between deSitter and global cosmic brane solutions clarified, supersymmetry
breaking discussion improved and references adde
On the Rational Type 0f Moment Angle Complexes
In this note it is shown that the moment angle complexes Z(K;(D^2,,S^1))
which are rationally elliptic are a product of odd spheres and a diskComment: This version avoids the use of an incorrect result from the
literature in the proof of Theorem 1.3. There is some text overlap with
arXiv:1410.645
Stochastic resonance for nonequilibrium systems
Stochastic resonance (SR) is a prominent phenomenon in many natural and engineered noisy systems, whereby the response to a periodic forcing is greatly amplified when the intensity of the noise is tuned to within a specific range of values. We propose here a general mathematical framework based on large deviation theory and, specifically, on the theory of quasipotentials, for describing SR in noisy
N
-dimensional nonequilibrium systems possessing two metastable states and undergoing a periodically modulated forcing. The drift and the volatility fields of the equations of motion can be fairly general, and the competing attractors of the deterministic dynamics and the edge state living on the basin boundary can, in principle, feature chaotic dynamics. Similarly, the perturbation field of the forcing can be fairly general. Our approach is able to recover as special cases the classical results previously presented in the literature for systems obeying detailed balance and allows for expressing the parameters describing SR and the statistics of residence times in the two-state approximation in terms of the unperturbed drift field, the volatility field, and the perturbation field. We clarify which specific properties of the forcing are relevant for amplifying or suppressing SR in a system and classify forcings according to classes of equivalence. Our results indicate a route for a detailed understanding of SR in rather general systems
Mergers and Typical Black Hole Microstates
We use mergers of microstates to obtain the first smooth horizonless
microstate solutions corresponding to a BPS three-charge black hole with a
classically large horizon area. These microstates have very long throats, that
become infinite in the classical limit; nevertheless, their curvature is
everywhere small. Having a classically-infinite throat makes these microstates
very similar to the typical microstates of this black hole. A rough CFT
analysis confirms this intuition, and indicates a possible class of dual CFT
microstates.
We also analyze the properties and the merging of microstates corresponding
to zero-entropy BPS black holes and black rings. We find that these solutions
have the same size as the horizon size of their classical counterparts, and we
examine the changes of internal structure of these microstates during mergers.Comment: 49 pages, 5 figures. v2 references adde
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