710 research outputs found
Measurement of entropy production rate in compressible turbulence
The rate of change of entropy is measured for a system of particles
floating on the surface of a fluid maintained in a turbulent steady state. The
resulting coagulation of the floaters allows one to relate to the
velocity divergence and to the Lyapunov exponents characterizing the behavior
of this system. The quantities measured from experiments and simulations are
found to agree well with the theoretical predictions.Comment: 7 Pages, 4 figures, 1 tabl
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Ecological theatre and the evolutionary game: how environmental and demographic factors determine payoffs in evolutionary games
In the standard approach to evolutionary games and replicator dynamics, differences in fitness can be interpreted as an excess from the mean Malthusian growth rate in the population. In the underlying reasoning, related to an analysis of "costs" and "benefits", there is a silent assumption that fitness can be described in some type of units. However, in most cases these units of measure are not explicitly specified. Then the question arises: are these theories testable? How can we measure "benefit" or "cost"? A natural language, useful for describing and justifying comparisons of strategic "cost" versus "benefits", is the terminology of demography, because the basic events that shape the outcome of natural selection are births and deaths. In this paper, we present the consequences of an explicit analysis of births and deaths in an evolutionary game theoretic framework. We will investigate different types of mortality pressures, their combinations and the possibility of trade-offs between mortality and fertility. We will show that within this new approach it is possible to model how strictly ecological factors such as density dependence and additive background fitness, which seem neutral in classical theory, can affect the outcomes of the game. We consider the example of the Hawk-Dove game, and show that when reformulated in terms of our new approach new details and new biological predictions are produced
An evolution equation in phase space and the Weyl correspondence
AbstractThe Weyl correspondence that associates a quantum-mechanical operator to a Hamiltonian function on phase space is defined for all tempered distributions on R2. The resulting Weyl operators are shown to include most Schroedinger operators for a system with one degree of freedom. For each tempered distribution, an evolution equation in phase space is defined that is formally equivalent to the dynamics of the Heisenberg picture. The evolution equation is studied both through a separation of variables technique that expresses the evolution operator as the difference of two Weyl operators and through the geometric properties of the distribution. For real tempered distributions with compact support the evolution equation has a unique solution if and only if the Weyl equation does. The evolution operator has skew-adjoint extensions that solve the evolution equation if the distribution satisfies an orthogonal symmetry condition
Dynamic Stability of the Replicator Equation with Continuous Strategy Space
We extend previous work that analyzes the stability of dynamics on probability over continuous strategy spaces. the stability concept considered is that of convergence to the equilibrium distribution in the strong topology for all initial distributions whose support is close to this equilibrium. Stability criteria involving strategy domination and local superiority are developed for equilibrium distributions that are monomorphic (i.e. the equilibrium consists of a single strategy) and for equilibrium distributions that have finite support
Dispersion of tracer particles in a compressible flow
The turbulent diffusion of Lagrangian tracer particles has been studied in a
flow on the surface of a large tank of water and in computer simulations. The
effect of flow compressibility is captured in images of particle fields. The
velocity field of floating particles has a divergence, whose probability
density function shows exponential tails. Also studied is the motion of pairs
and triplets of particles. The mean square separation is fitted to
the scaling form ~ t^alpha, and in contrast with the
Richardson-Kolmogorov prediction, an extended range with a reduced scaling
exponent of alpha=1.65 pm 0.1 is found. Clustering is also manifest in strongly
deformed triangles spanned within triplets of tracers.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
Multifractal clustering of passive tracers on a surface flow
We study the anomalous scaling of the mass density measure of Lagrangian
tracers in a compressible flow realized on the free surface on top of a three
dimensional flow. The full two dimensional probability distribution of local
stretching rates is measured. The intermittency exponents which quantify the
fluctuations of the mass measure of tracers at small scales are calculated from
the large deviation form of stretching rate fluctuations. The results indicate
the existence of a critical exponent above which exponents
saturate, in agreement with what has been predicted by an analytically solvable
model. Direct evaluation of the multi-fractal dimensions by reconstructing the
coarse-grained particle density supports the results for low order moments.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, submitted to EP
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