2,759 research outputs found
Effects of internal fluctuations on the spreading of Hantavirus
We study the spread of Hantavirus over a host population of deer mice using a
population dynamics model. We show that taking into account the internal
fluctuations in the mouse population due to its discrete character strongly
alters the behaviour of the system. In addition to the familiar transition
present in the deterministic model, the inclusion of internal fluctuations
leads to the emergence of an additional deterministically hidden transition. We
determine parameter values that lead to maximal propagation of the disease, and
discuss some implications for disease prevention policies
Weak disorder: anomalous transport and diffusion are normal yet again
Particles driven through a periodic potential by an external constant force
are known to exhibit a pronounced peak of the diffusion around a critical force
that defines the transition between locked and running states. It has recently
been shown both experimentally and numerically that this peak is greatly
enhanced if some amount of spatial disorder is superimposed on the periodic
potential. Here we show that beyond a simple enhancement lies a much more
interesting phenomenology. For some parameter regimes the system exhibits a
rich variety of behaviors from normal diffusion to superdiffusion, subdiffusion
and even subtransport.Comment: Substantial improvements in presentatio
Velocity Distribution in a Viscous Granular Gas
We investigate the velocity relaxation of a viscous one-dimensional granular
gas, that is, one in which neither energy nor momentum is conserved in a
collision. Of interest is the distribution of velocities in the gas as it
cools, and the time dependence of the relaxation behavior. A Boltzmann equation
of instantaneous binary collisions leads to a two-peaked distribution with each
peak relaxing to zero velocity as 1/t while each peak also narrows as 1/t.
Numerical simulations of grains on a line also lead to a double-peaked
distribution that narrows as 1/t. A Maxwell approximation leads to a
single-peaked distribution about zero velocity with power-law wings. This
distribution narrows exponentially. In either case, the relaxing distribution
is not of Maxwell-Boltzmann form
An analytical approach to sorting in periodic potentials
There has been a recent revolution in the ability to manipulate
micrometer-sized objects on surfaces patterned by traps or obstacles of
controllable configurations and shapes. One application of this technology is
to separate particles driven across such a surface by an external force
according to some particle characteristic such as size or index of refraction.
The surface features cause the trajectories of particles driven across the
surface to deviate from the direction of the force by an amount that depends on
the particular characteristic, thus leading to sorting. While models of this
behavior have provided a good understanding of these observations, the
solutions have so far been primarily numerical. In this paper we provide
analytic predictions for the dependence of the angle between the direction of
motion and the external force on a number of model parameters for periodic as
well as random surfaces. We test these predictions against exact numerical
simulations
Synchronization of globally coupled two-state stochastic oscillators with a state dependent refractory period
We present a model of identical coupled two-state stochastic units each of
which in isolation is governed by a fixed refractory period. The nonlinear
coupling between units directly affects the refractory period, which now
depends on the global state of the system and can therefore itself become time
dependent. At weak coupling the array settles into a quiescent stationary
state. Increasing coupling strength leads to a saddle node bifurcation, beyond
which the quiescent state coexists with a stable limit cycle of nonlinear
coherent oscillations. We explicitly determine the critical coupling constant
for this transition
Harvesting Thermal Fluctuations: Activation Process Induced by a Nonlinear Chain in Thermal Equilibrium
We present a model in which the immediate environment of a bistable system is
a molecular chain which in turn is connected to a thermal environment of the
Langevin form. The molecular chain consists of masses connected by harmonic or
by anharmonic springs. The distribution, intensity, and mobility of thermal
fluctuations in these chains is strongly dependent on the nature of the springs
and leads to different transition dynamics for the activated process. Thus, all
else (temperature, damping, coupling parameters between the chain and the
bistable system) being the same, the hard chain may provide an environment
described as diffusion-limited and more effective in the activation process,
while the soft chain may provide an environment described as energy-limited and
less effective. The importance of a detailed understanding of the thermal
environment toward the understanding of the activation process itself is thus
highlighted
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