4,475 research outputs found

    Connecting deterministic and stochastic metapopulation models

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    In this paper, we study the relationship between certain stochastic and deterministic versions of Hanski's incidence function model and the spatially realistic Levins model. We show that the stochastic version can be well approximated in a certain sense by the deterministic version when the number of habitat patches is large, provided that the presence or absence of individuals in a given patch is influenced by a large number of other patches. Explicit bounds on the deviation between the stochastic and deterministic models are given.Comment: The final publication is available at Springer via http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00285-015-0865-

    Local approximation of a metapopulation's equilibrium

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    We consider the approximation of the equilibrium of a metapopulation model, in which a finite number of patches are randomly distributed over a bounded subset Ω\Omega of Euclidean space. The approximation is good when a large number of patches contribute to the colonization pressure on any given unoccupied patch, and when the quality of the patches varies little over the length scale determined by the colonization radius. If this is the case, the equilibrium probability of a patch at zz being occupied is shown to be close to q1(z)q_1(z), the equilibrium occupation probability in Levins's model, at any point z∈Ωz \in \Omega not too close to the boundary, if the local colonization pressure and extinction rates appropriate to zz are assumed. The approximation is justified by giving explicit upper and lower bounds for the occupation probabilities, expressed in terms of the model parameters. Since the patches are distributed randomly, the occupation probabilities are also random, and we complement our bounds with explicit bounds on the probability that they are satisfied at all patches simultaneously

    Interacting vector fields in Relativity without Relativity

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    Barbour, Foster and \'{O} Murchadha have recently developed a new framework, called here {\it{the 3-space approach}}, for the formulation of classical bosonic dynamics. Neither time nor a locally Minkowskian structure of spacetime are presupposed. Both arise as emergent features of the world from geodesic-type dynamics on a space of 3-dimensional metric--matter configurations. In fact gravity, the universal light cone and Abelian gauge theory minimally coupled to gravity all arise naturally through a single common mechanism. It yields relativity -- and more -- without presupposing relativity. This paper completes the recovery of the presently known bosonic sector within the 3-space approach. We show, for a rather general ansatz, that 3-vector fields can interact among themselves only as Yang--Mills fields minimally coupled to gravity.Comment: Replaced with final version accepted by Classical and Quantum Gravity (14 pages, no figures

    On the emergence of random initial conditions in fluid limits

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    The paper presents a phenomenon occurring in population processes that start near zero and have large carrying capacity. By the classical result of Kurtz~(1970), such processes, normalized by the carrying capacity, converge on finite intervals to the solutions of ordinary differential equations, also known as the fluid limit. When the initial population is small relative to carrying capacity, this limit is trivial. Here we show that, viewed at suitably chosen times increasing to infinity, the process converges to the fluid limit, governed by the same dynamics, but with a random initial condition. This random initial condition is related to the martingale limit of an associated linear birth and death process

    The Definition of Mach's Principle

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    Two definitions of Mach's principle are proposed. Both are related to gauge theory, are universal in scope and amount to formulations of causality that take into account the relational nature of position, time, and size. One of them leads directly to general relativity and may have relevance to the problem of creating a quantum theory of gravity.Comment: To be published in Foundations of Physics as invited contribution to Peter Mittelstaedt's 80th Birthday Festschrift. 30 page

    Leptons, quarks, and their antiparticles from a phase-space perspective

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    It is argued that antiparticles may be interpreted in macroscopic terms without explicitly using the concept of time and its reversal. The appropriate framework is that of nonrelativistic phase space. It is recalled that a quantum version of this approach leads also, alongside the appearance of antiparticles, to the emergence of `internal' quantum numbers identifiable with weak isospin, weak hypercharge and colour, and to the derivation of the Gell-Mann-Nishijima relation, while simultaneously offering a preonless interpretation of the Harari-Shupe rishon model. Furthermore, it is shown that - under the assumption of the additivity of canonical momenta - the approach entails the emergence of string-like structures resembling mesons and baryons, thus providing a different starting point for the discussion of quark unobservability.Comment: Talk given at Fifth Int. Workshop DICE2010 Space-Time-Matter, Castiglioncello, Italy, September 13-17, 201

    A law of large numbers approximation for Markov population processes with countably many types

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    When modelling metapopulation dynamics, the influence of a single patch on the metapopulation depends on the number of individuals in the patch. Since the population size has no natural upper limit, this leads to systems in which there are countably infinitely many possible types of individual. Analogous considerations apply in the transmission of parasitic diseases. In this paper, we prove a law of large numbers for rather general systems of this kind, together with a rather sharp bound on the rate of convergence in an appropriately chosen weighted â„“1\ell_1 norm.Comment: revised version in response to referee comments, 34 page

    Poisson approximations for the Ising model

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    A dd-dimensional Ising model on a lattice torus is considered. As the size nn of the lattice tends to infinity, a Poisson approximation is given for the distribution of the number of copies in the lattice of any given local configuration, provided the magnetic field a=a(n)a=a(n) tends to −∞-\infty and the pair potential bb remains fixed. Using the Stein-Chen method, a bound is given for the total variation error in the ferromagnetic case.Comment: 25 pages, 1 figur

    Quenched QCD at finite density

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    Simulations of quenched QCDQCD at relatively small but {\it nonzero} chemical potential μ\mu on 32×16332 \times 16^3 lattices indicate that the nucleon screening mass decreases linearly as μ\mu increases predicting a critical chemical potential of one third the nucleon mass, mN/3m_N/3, by extrapolation. The meson spectrum does not change as μ\mu increases over the same range, from zero to mπ/2m_\pi/2. Past studies of quenched lattice QCD have suggested that there is phase transition at μ=mπ/2\mu = m_\pi/2. We provide alternative explanations for these results, and find a number of technical reasons why standard lattice simulation techniques suffer from greatly enhanced fluctuations and finite size effects for μ\mu ranging from mπ/2m_\pi/2 to mN/3m_N/3. We find evidence for such problems in our simulations, and suggest that they can be surmounted by improved measurement techniques.Comment: 23 pages, Revte
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