762 research outputs found
On the prevalence of non-Gibbsian states in mathematical physics
Gibbs measures are the main object of study in equilibrium statistical
mechanics, and are used in many other contexts, including dynamical systems and
ergodic theory, and spatial statistics. However, in a large number of natural
instances one encounters measures that are not of Gibbsian form. We present
here a number of examples of such non-Gibbsian measures, and discuss some of
the underlying mathematical and physical issues to which they gave rise
Variational description of Gibbs-non-Gibbs dynamical transitions for the Curie-Weiss model
We perform a detailed study of Gibbs-non-Gibbs transitions for the
Curie-Weiss model subject to independent spin-flip dynamics
("infinite-temperature" dynamics). We show that, in this setup, the program
outlined in van Enter, Fern\'andez, den Hollander and Redig can be fully
completed, namely that Gibbs-non-Gibbs transitions are equivalent to
bifurcations in the set of global minima of the large-deviation rate function
for the trajectories of the magnetization conditioned on their endpoint. As a
consequence, we show that the time-evolved model is non-Gibbs if and only if
this set is not a singleton for some value of the final magnetization. A
detailed description of the possible scenarios of bifurcation is given, leading
to a full characterization of passages from Gibbs to non-Gibbs -and vice versa-
with sharp transition times (under the dynamics Gibbsianness can be lost and
can be recovered).
Our analysis expands the work of Ermolaev and Kulske who considered zero
magnetic field and finite-temperature spin-flip dynamics. We consider both zero
and non-zero magnetic field but restricted to infinite-temperature spin-flip
dynamics. Our results reveal an interesting dependence on the interaction
parameters, including the presence of forbidden regions for the optimal
trajectories and the possible occurrence of overshoots and undershoots in the
optimal trajectories. The numerical plots provided are obtained with the help
of MATHEMATICA.Comment: Key words and phrases: Curie-Weiss model, spin-flip dynamics, Gibbs
vs. non-Gibbs, dynamical transition, large deviations, action integral,
bifurcation of rate functio
An investigation on the Acceptance of Facebook by Travellers for Travel Planning
Due to the emergence of social media and web 2.0 applications within the last few years, tourists' travel behaviour and decision-making changed. This study investigates tourists' behavioural intentions to use Facebook for travel planning purposes. To address this objective, a combination of survey and 19 interviews provided qualitative and quantitative data. Results indicated that Information search, Sharing travel experiences and Trust were the main determinants of intention to use Facebook. In particular, travellers view Facebook as a tourism information source, they are more willing to share their experiences on their own profile rather than a providers page and that they trust other tourism related sites more than Facebook. Practical and theoretical implications are discussed
Erasure entropies and Gibbs measures
Recently Verdu and Weissman introduced erasure entropies, which are meant to
measure the information carried by one or more symbols given all of the
remaining symbols in the realization of the random process or field. A natural
relation to Gibbs measures has also been observed. In his short note we study
this relation further, review a few earlier contributions from statistical
mechanics, and provide the formula for the erasure entropy of a Gibbs measure
in terms of the corresponding potentia. For some
2-dimensonal Ising models, for which Verdu and Weissman suggested a numerical
procedure, we show how to obtain an exact formula for the erasure entropy. lComment: 1o pages, to appear in Markov Processes and Related Field
Scaling and Inverse Scaling in Anisotropic Bootstrap percolation
In bootstrap percolation it is known that the critical percolation threshold
tends to converge slowly to zero with increasing system size, or, inversely,
the critical size diverges fast when the percolation probability goes to zero.
To obtain higher-order terms (that is, sharp and sharper thresholds) for the
percolation threshold in general is a hard question. In the case of
two-dimensional anisotropic models, sometimes correction terms can be obtained
from inversion in a relatively simple manner.Comment: Contribution to the proceedings of the 2013 EURANDOM workshop
Probabilistic Cellular Automata: Theory, Applications and Future
Perspectives, equation typo corrected, constant of generalisation correcte
Aperiodicity in equilibrium systems: Between order and disorder
Spatial aperiodicity occurs in various models and material s. Although today
the most well-known examples occur in the area of quasicrystals, other
applications might also be of interest. Here we discuss some issues related to
the notion and occurrence of aperiodic order in equilibrium statistical
mechanics. In particular, we consider some spectral characterisations,and
shortly review what is known about the occurrence of aperiodic order in lattice
models at zero and non-zero temperatures. At the end some more speculative
connections to the theory of (spin-)glasses are indicated.Comment: Contribution to ICQ12, some corrections and explanatory remarks adde
The Renormalization-Group peculiarities of Griffiths and Pearce: What have we learned?
We review what we have learned about the "Renormalization-Group
peculiarities" which were discovered about twenty years ago by Griffiths and
Pearce, and which questions they asked are still widely open. We also mention
some related developments.Comment: Proceedings Marseille meeting on mathematical results in statistical
mechanic
A remark on the notion of robust phase transitions
We point out that the high-q Potts model on a regular lattice at its
transition temperature provides an example of a non-robust - in the sense
recently proposed by Pemantle and Steif- phase transition
Problems with the definition of renormalized Hamiltonians for momentum-space renormalization transformations
For classical lattice systems with finite (Ising) spins, we show that the
implementation of momentum-space renormalization at the level of Hamiltonians
runs into the same type of difficulties as found for real-space
transformations: Renormalized Hamiltonians are ill-defined in certain regions
of the phase diagram.Comment: 14 pages, late
Gibbs-non-Gibbs transitions via large deviations: computable examples
We give new and explicitly computable examples of Gibbs-non-Gibbs transitions
of mean-field type, using the large deviation approach introduced in [4]. These
examples include Brownian motion with small variance and related diffusion
processes, such as the Ornstein-Uhlenbeck process, as well as birth and death
processes. We show for a large class of initial measures and diffusive dynamics
both short-time conservation of Gibbsianness and dynamical Gibbs-non-Gibbs
transitions
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