758 research outputs found
Stationary uphill currents in locally perturbed Zero Range Processes
Uphill currents are observed when mass diffuses in the direction of the
density gradient. We study this phenomenon in stationary conditions in the
framework of locally perturbed 1D Zero Range Processes (ZRP). We show that the
onset of currents flowing from the reservoir with smaller density to the one
with larger density can be caused by a local asymmetry in the hopping rates on
a single site at the center of the lattice. For fixed injection rates at the
boundaries, we prove that a suitable tuning of the asymmetry in the bulk may
induce uphill diffusion at arbitrarily large, finite volumes. We also deduce
heuristically the hydrodynamic behavior of the model and connect the local
asymmetry characterizing the ZRP dynamics to a matching condition relevant for
the macroscopic problem
Does communication enhance pedestrians transport in the dark?
We study the motion of pedestrians through an obscure tunnel where the lack
of visibility hides the exits. Using a lattice model, we explore the effects of
communication on the effective transport properties of the crowd of
pedestrians. More precisely, we study the effect of two thresholds on the
structure of the effective nonlinear diffusion coefficient. One threshold
models pedestrians's communication efficiency in the dark, while the other one
describes the tunnel capacity. Essentially, we note that if the evacuees show a
maximum trust (leading to a fast communication), they tend to quickly find the
exit and hence the collective action tends to prevent the occurrence of
disasters
Uphill migration in coupled driven particle systems
In particle systems subject to a nonuniform drive, particle migration is
observed from the driven to the non--driven region and vice--versa, depending
on details of the hopping dynamics, leading to apparent violations of Fick's
law and of steady--state thermodynamics. We propose and discuss a very basic
model in the framework of independent random walkers on a pair of rings, one of
which features biased hopping rates, in which this phenomenon is observed and
fully explained.Comment: 8 pages, 10 figure
Transport in quantum multi-barrier systems as random walks on a lattice
A quantum finite multi-barrier system, with a periodic potential, is
considered and exact expressions for its plane wave amplitudes are obtained
using the Transfer Matrix method [10]. This quantum model is then associated
with a stochastic process of independent random walks on a lattice, by properly
relating the wave amplitudes with the hopping probabilities of the particles
moving on the lattice and with the injection rates from external particle
reservoirs. Analytical and numerical results prove that the stationary density
profile of the particle system overlaps with the quantum mass density profile
of the stationary Schrodinger equation, when the parameters of the two models
are suitably matched. The equivalence between the quantum model and a
stochastic particle system would mainly be fruitful in a disordered setup.
Indeed, we also show, here, that this connection, analytically proven to hold
for periodic barriers, holds even when the width of the barriers and the
distance between barriers are randomly chosen
Stationary currents in particle systems with constrained hopping rates
We study the effect on the stationary currents of constraints affecting the
hopping rates in stochastic particle systems. In the framework of Zero Range
Processes with drift within a finite volume, we discuss how the current is
reduced by the presence of the constraint and deduce exact formulae, fully
explicit in some cases. The model discussed here has been introduced in Ref.
[1] and is relevant for the description of pedestrian motion in elongated dark
corridors, where the constraint on the hopping rates can be related to
limitations on the interaction distance among pedestrians
Model reduction of Brownian oscillators: quantification of errors and long-time behaviour
A procedure for model reduction of stochastic ordinary differential equations
with additive noise was recently introduced in [Colangeli-Duong-Muntean,
Journal of Physics A: Mathematical and Theoretical, 2022], based on the
Invariant Manifold method and on the Fluctuation-Dissipation relation. A
general question thus arises as to whether one can rigorously quantify the
error entailed by the use of the reduced dynamics in place of the original one.
In this work we provide explicit formulae and estimates of the error in terms
of the Wasserstein distance, both in the presence or in the absence of a sharp
time-scale separation between the variables to be retained or eliminated from
the description, as well as in the long-time behaviour.
Keywords: Model reduction, Wasserstein distance, error estimates, coupled
Brownian oscillators, invariant manifold, Fluctuation-Dissipation relation
The SiC problem: astronomical and meteoritic evidence
Pre-solar grains of silicon carbide found in meteorites and interpreted as
having had an origin around carbon stars from their isotopic composition, have
all been found to be of the beta-SiC polytype. Yet to date fits to the 11.3
microns SiC emission band of carbon stars had been obtained only for alpha-SiC
grains. We present thin film infrared (IR) absorption spectra measured in a
diamond anvil cell for both the alpha- and beta- polymorphs of synthetic SiC
and compare the results with previously published spectra taken using the KBr
matrix method. We find that our thin film spectra have positions nearly
identical to those obtained previously from finely ground samples in KBr.
Hence, we show that this discrepancy has arisen from inappropriate `KBr
corrections' having been made to laboratory spectra of SiC particles dispersed
in KBr matrices. We re-fit a sample of carbon star mid-IR spectra, using
laboratory data with no KBr correction applied, and show that beta-SiC grains
fit the observations, while alpha-SiC grains do not. The discrepancy between
meteoritic and astronomical identifications of the SiC-type is therefore
removed. This work shows that the diamond anvil cell thin film method can be
used to produce mineral spectra applicable to cosmic environments without
further manipulation.Comment: to be published in Astrophysical Journal Letter 4 pages, 3 figure
Nonequilibrium Response from the dissipative Liouville Equation
The problem of response of nonequilibrium systems is currently under intense
investigation. We propose a general method of solution of the Liouville
Equation for thermostatted particle systems subjected to external forces which
retains only the slow degrees of freedom, by projecting out the majority of
fast variables. Response formulae, extending the Green-Kubo relations to
dissipative dynamics are provided, and comparison with numerical data is
presented
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