23 research outputs found
Survival Probability of a Ballistic Tracer Particle in the Presence of Diffusing Traps
We calculate the survival probability P_S(t) up to time t of a tracer
particle moving along a deterministic trajectory in a continuous d-dimensional
space in the presence of diffusing but mutually noninteracting traps. In
particular, for a tracer particle moving ballistically with a constant velocity
c, we obtain an exact expression for P_S(t), valid for all t, for d<2. For d
\geq 2, we obtain the leading asymptotic behavior of P_S(t) for large t. In all
cases, P_S(t) decays exponentially for large t, P_S(t) \sim \exp(-\theta t). We
provide an explicit exact expression for the exponent \theta in dimensions d
\leq 2, and for the physically relevant case, d=3, as a function of the system
parameters.Comment: RevTeX, 4 page
Survival probability of a diffusing particle in the presence of Poisson-distributed mobile traps
The problem of a diffusing particle moving among diffusing traps is analyzed
in general space dimension d. We consider the case where the traps are
initially randomly distributed in space, with uniform density rho, and derive
upper and lower bounds for the probability Q(t) (averaged over all particle and
trap trajectories) that the particle survives up to time t. We show that, for
1<=d<2, the bounds converge asymptotically to give where and D
is the diffusion constant of the traps, and that for d=2. For d>2 bounds can still be derived, but they no longer
converge for large t. For 1<=d<=2, these asymptotic form are independent of the
diffusion constant of the particle. The results are compared with simulation
results obtained using a new algorithm [V. Mehra and P. Grassberger, Phys. Rev.
E v65 050101 (2002)] which is described in detail. Deviations from the
predicted asymptotic forms are found to be large even for very small values of
Q(t), indicating slowly decaying corrections whose form is consistent with the
bounds. We also present results in d=1 for the case where the trap densities on
either side of the particle are different. For this case we can still obtain
exact bounds but they no longer converge.Comment: 13 pages, RevTeX4, 6 figures. Figures and references updated;
equations corrected; discussion clarifie
A Singular Perturbation Analysis for \\Unstable Systems with Convective Nonlinearity
We use a singular perturbation method to study the interface dynamics of a
non-conserved order parameter (NCOP) system, of the reaction-diffusion type,
for the case where an external bias field or convection is present. We find
that this method, developed by Kawasaki, Yalabik and Gunton for the
time-dependant Ginzburg-Landau equation and used successfully on other NCOP
systems, breaks down for our system when the strength of bias/convection gets
large enough.Comment: 5 pages, PostScript forma
Emergence of pulled fronts in fermionic microscopic particle models
We study the emergence and dynamics of pulled fronts described by the
Fisher-Kolmogorov-Petrovsky-Piscounov (FKPP) equation in the microscopic
reaction-diffusion process A + A A$ on the lattice when only a particle is
allowed per site. To this end we identify the parameter that controls the
strength of internal fluctuations in this model, namely, the number of
particles per correlated volume. When internal fluctuations are suppressed, we
explictly see the matching between the deterministic FKPP description and the
microscopic particle model.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures. Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. E as a
Rapid Communicatio
Traveling wave fronts and the transition to saturation
We propose a general method to study the solutions to nonlinear QCD evolution
equations, based on a deep analogy with the physics of traveling waves. In
particular, we show that the transition to the saturation regime of high energy
QCD is identical to the formation of the front of a traveling wave. Within this
physical picture, we provide the expressions for the saturation scale and the
gluon density profile as a function of the total rapidity and the transverse
momentum. The application to the Balitsky-Kovchegov equation for both fixed and
running coupling constants confirms the effectiveness of this method.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figures, references adde
Persistence properties of a system of coagulating and annihilating random walkers
We study a d-dimensional system of diffusing particles that on contact either
annihilate with probability 1/(q-1) or coagulate with probability (q-2)/(q-1).
In 1-dimension, the system models the zero temperature Glauber dynamics of
domain walls in the q-state Potts model. We calculate P(m,t), the probability
that a randomly chosen lattice site contains a particle whose ancestors have
undergone exactly (m-1) coagulations. Using perturbative renormalization group
analysis for d < 2, we show that, if the number of coagulations m is much less
than the typical number M(t), then P(m,t) ~ m^(z/d) t^(-theta), with theta=d Q
+ Q(Q-1/2) epsilon + O(epsilon^2), z=(2Q-1) epsilon + (2 Q-1) (Q-1)(1/2+A Q)
epsilon^2 +O(epsilon^3), where Q=(q-1)/q, epsilon =2-d and A =-0.006. M(t) is
shown to scale as t^(d/2-delta), where delta = d (1 -Q)+(Q-1)(Q-1/2) epsilon+
O(epsilon^2). In two dimensions, we show that P(m,t) ~ ln(t)^(Q(3-2Q))
ln(m)^((2Q-1)^2) t^(-2Q) for m << t^(2 Q-1). The 1-dimensional results
corresponding to epsilon=1 are compared with results from Monte Carlo
simulations.Comment: 12 pages, revtex, 5 figure
Random Convex Hulls and Extreme Value Statistics
In this paper we study the statistical properties of convex hulls of
random points in a plane chosen according to a given distribution. The points
may be chosen independently or they may be correlated. After a non-exhaustive
survey of the somewhat sporadic literature and diverse methods used in the
random convex hull problem, we present a unifying approach, based on the notion
of support function of a closed curve and the associated Cauchy's formulae,
that allows us to compute exactly the mean perimeter and the mean area enclosed
by the convex polygon both in case of independent as well as correlated points.
Our method demonstrates a beautiful link between the random convex hull problem
and the subject of extreme value statistics. As an example of correlated
points, we study here in detail the case when the points represent the vertices
of independent random walks. In the continuum time limit this reduces to
independent planar Brownian trajectories for which we compute exactly, for
all , the mean perimeter and the mean area of their global convex hull. Our
results have relevant applications in ecology in estimating the home range of a
herd of animals. Some of these results were announced recently in a short
communication [Phys. Rev. Lett. {\bf 103}, 140602 (2009)].Comment: 61 pages (pedagogical review); invited contribution to the special
issue of J. Stat. Phys. celebrating the 50 years of Yeshiba/Rutgers meeting