2,105 research outputs found

    On time's arrow in Ehrenfest models with reversible deterministic dynamics

    Full text link
    We introduce a deterministic, time-reversible version of the Ehrenfest urn model. The distribution of first-passage times from equilibrium to non-equilibrium states and vice versa is calculated. We find that average times for transition to non-equilibrium always scale exponentially with the system size, whereas the time scale for relaxation to equilibrium depends on microscopic dynamics. To illustrate this, we also look at deterministic and stochastic versions of the Ehrenfest model with a distribution of microscopic relaxation times.Comment: 6 pages, 7 figures, revte

    Metastability in the two-dimensional Ising model with free boundary conditions

    Full text link
    We investigate metastability in the two dimensional Ising model in a square with free boundary conditions at low temperatures. Starting with all spins down in a small positive magnetic field, we show that the exit from this metastable phase occurs via the nucleation of a critical droplet in one of the four corners of the system. We compute the lifetime of the metastable phase analytically in the limit T0T\to 0, h0h\to 0 and via Monte Carlo simulations at fixed values of TT and hh and find good agreement. This system models the effects of boundary domains in magnetic storage systems exiting from a metastable phase when a small external field is applied.Comment: 24 pages, TeX fil

    Approach to equilibrium for the stochastic NLS

    Full text link
    We study the approach to equilibrium, described by a Gibbs measure, for a system on a dd-dimensional torus evolving according to a stochastic nonlinear Schr\"odinger equation (SNLS) with a high frequency truncation. We prove exponential approach to the truncated Gibbs measure both for the focusing and defocusing cases when the dynamics is constrained via suitable boundary conditions to regions of the Fourier space where the Hamiltonian is convex. Our method is based on establishing a spectral gap for the non self-adjoint Fokker-Planck operator governing the time evolution of the measure, which is {\it uniform} in the frequency truncation NN. The limit NN\to\infty is discussed.Comment: 15 p

    Effect of phonon-phonon interactions on localization

    Get PDF
    We study the heat current J in a classical one-dimensional disordered chain with on-site pinning and with ends connected to stochastic thermal reservoirs at different temperatures. In the absence of anharmonicity all modes are localized and there is a gap in the spectrum. Consequently J decays exponentially with system size N. Using simulations we find that even a small amount of anharmonicity leads to a J~1/N dependence, implying diffusive transport of energy.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, Published versio

    Heat conduction in disordered harmonic lattices with energy conserving noise

    Full text link
    We study heat conduction in a harmonic crystal whose bulk dynamics is supplemented by random reversals (flips) of the velocity of each particle at a rate λ\lambda. The system is maintained in a nonequilibrium stationary state(NESS) by contacts with Langevin reservoirs at different temperatures. We show that the one-body and pair correlations in this system are the same (after an appropriate mapping of parameters) as those obtained for a model with self-consistent reservoirs. This is true both for the case of equal and random(quenched) masses. While the heat conductivity in the NESS of the ordered system is known explicitly, much less is known about the random mass case. Here we investigate the random system, with velocity flips. We improve the bounds on the Green-Kubo conductivity obtained by C.Bernardin. The conductivity of the 1D system is then studied both numerically and analytically. This sheds some light on the effect of noise on the transport properties of systems with localized states caused by quenched disorder.Comment: 19 pages, 8 figure

    A Remedy for Rule 238

    Get PDF
    Rule 238 of the Pennsylvania Rules of Civil Procedure was promulgated in 1979 in an attempt to encourage parties to settle their cases as early as possible in order to avoid the costs, both to the court system and to the litigants themselves, of litigation. Seven years later this experiment was deemed a failure, for in Craig v. Magee Memorial Rehabilitation Center the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania declared the Rule to be unconstitutional and therefore suspended its operation. In this same opinion, the court directed the Civil Procedure Rules Committee to propose an amended version of the Rule for its consideration. The author argues that the only way Rule 238 will be able to meet its original expectations is if the Committee overhauls the Rule by amending the already existing delay damages provision and combining it with a costs provision similar to the one found in F. R. Ctv. P. 68
    corecore