394 research outputs found
Transport properties of a modified Lorentz gas
We present a detailed study of the first simple mechanical system that shows
fully realistic transport behavior while still being exactly solvable at the
level of equilibrium statistical mechanics. The system under consideration is a
Lorentz gas with fixed freely-rotating circular scatterers interacting with
point particles via perfectly rough collisions. Upon imposing a temperature
and/or a chemical potential gradient, a stationary state is attained for which
local thermal equilibrium holds for low values of the imposed gradients.
Transport in this system is normal, in the sense that the transport
coefficients which characterize the flow of heat and matter are finite in the
thermodynamic limit. Moreover, the two flows are non-trivially coupled,
satisfying Onsager's reciprocity relations to within numerical accuracy as well
as the Green-Kubo relations . We further show numerically that an applied
electric field causes the same currents as the corresponding chemical potential
gradient in first order of the applied field. Puzzling discrepancies in higher
order effects (Joule heating) are also observed. Finally, the role of entropy
production in this purely Hamiltonian system is shortly discussed.Comment: 16 pages, 16 figures, submitted to J. Stat. Phy
Equilibrium statistical mechanics for single waves and wave spectra in Langmuir wave-particle interaction
Under the conditions of weak Langmuir turbulence, a self-consistent
wave-particle Hamiltonian models the effective nonlinear interaction of a
spectrum of M waves with N resonant out-of-equilibrium tail electrons. In order
to address its intrinsically nonlinear time-asymptotic behavior, a Monte Carlo
code was built to estimate its equilibrium statistical mechanics in both the
canonical and microcanonical ensembles. First the single wave model is
considered in the cold beam/plasma instability and in the O'Neil setting for
nonlinear Landau damping. O'Neil's threshold, that separates nonzero
time-asymptotic wave amplitude states from zero ones, is associated to a second
order phase transition. These two studies provide both a testbed for the Monte
Carlo canonical and microcanonical codes, with the comparison with exact
canonical results, and an opportunity to propose quantitative results to
longstanding issues in basic nonlinear plasma physics. Then the properly
speaking weak turbulence framework is considered through the case of a large
spectrum of waves. Focusing on the small coupling limit, as a benchmark for the
statistical mechanics of weak Langmuir turbulence, it is shown that Monte Carlo
microcanonical results fully agree with an exact microcanonical derivation. The
wave spectrum is predicted to collapse towards small wavelengths together with
the escape of initially resonant particles towards low bulk plasma thermal
speeds. This study reveals the fundamental discrepancy between the long-time
dynamics of single waves, that can support finite amplitude steady states, and
of wave spectra, that cannot.Comment: 15 pages, 7 figures, to appear in Physics of Plasma
Surprising relations between parametric level correlations and fidelity decay
Unexpected relations between fidelity decay and cross form--factor, i.e.,
parametric level correlations in the time domain are found both by a heuristic
argument and by comparing exact results, using supersymmetry techniques, in the
framework of random matrix theory. A power law decay near Heisenberg time, as a
function of the relevant parameter, is shown to be at the root of revivals
recently discovered for fidelity decay. For cross form--factors the revivals
are illustrated by a numerical study of a multiply kicked Ising spin chain.Comment: 4 pages 3 figure
Transition from Gaussian-orthogonal to Gaussian-unitary ensemble in a microwave billiard with threefold symmetry
Recently it has been shown that time-reversal invariant systems with discrete
symmetries may display in certain irreducible subspaces spectral statistics
corresponding to the Gaussian unitary ensemble (GUE) rather than to the
expected orthogonal one (GOE). A Kramers type degeneracy is predicted in such
situations. We present results for a microwave billiard with a threefold
rotational symmetry and with the option to display or break a reflection
symmetry. This allows us to observe the change from GOE to GUE statistics for
one subset of levels. Since it was not possible to separate the three
subspectra reliably, the number variances for the superimposed spectra were
studied. The experimental results are compared with a theoretical and numerical
study considering the effects of level splitting and level loss
Phase shift experiments identifying Kramers doublets in a chaotic superconducting microwave billiard of threefold symmetry
The spectral properties of a two-dimensional microwave billiard showing
threefold symmetry have been studied with a new experimental technique. This
method is based on the behavior of the eigenmodes under variation of a phase
shift between two input channels, which strongly depends on the symmetries of
the eigenfunctions. Thereby a complete set of 108 Kramers doublets has been
identified by a simple and purely experimental method. This set clearly shows
Gaussian unitary ensemble statistics, although the system is time-reversal
invariant.Comment: RevTex 4, 5 figure
Metastability in Markov processes
We present a formalism to describe slowly decaying systems in the context of
finite Markov chains obeying detailed balance. We show that phase space can be
partitioned into approximately decoupled regions, in which one may introduce
restricted Markov chains which are close to the original process but do not
leave these regions. Within this context, we identify the conditions under
which the decaying system can be considered to be in a metastable state.
Furthermore, we show that such metastable states can be described in
thermodynamic terms and define their free energy. This is accomplished showing
that the probability distribution describing the metastable state is indeed
proportional to the equilibrium distribution, as is commonly assumed. We test
the formalism numerically in the case of the two-dimensional kinetic Ising
model, using the Wang--Landau algorithm to show this proportionality
explicitly, and confirm that the proportionality constant is as derived in the
theory. Finally, we extend the formalism to situations in which a system can
have several metastable states.Comment: 30 pages, 5 figures; version with one higher quality figure available
at http://www.fis.unam.mx/~dsanders
Identifying States of a Financial Market
The understanding of complex systems has become a central issue because
complex systems exist in a wide range of scientific disciplines. Time series
are typical experimental results we have about complex systems. In the analysis
of such time series, stationary situations have been extensively studied and
correlations have been found to be a very powerful tool. Yet most natural
processes are non-stationary. In particular, in times of crisis, accident or
trouble, stationarity is lost. As examples we may think of financial markets,
biological systems, reactors or the weather. In non-stationary situations
analysis becomes very difficult and noise is a severe problem. Following a
natural urge to search for order in the system, we endeavor to define states
through which systems pass and in which they remain for short times. Success in
this respect would allow to get a better understanding of the system and might
even lead to methods for controlling the system in more efficient ways.
We here concentrate on financial markets because of the easy access we have
to good data and because of the strong non-stationary effects recently seen. We
analyze the S&P 500 stocks in the 19-year period 1992-2010. Here, we propose
such an above mentioned definition of state for a financial market and use it
to identify points of drastic change in the correlation structure. These points
are mapped to occurrences of financial crises. We find that a wide variety of
characteristic correlation structure patterns exist in the observation time
window, and that these characteristic correlation structure patterns can be
classified into several typical "market states". Using this classification we
recognize transitions between different market states. A similarity measure we
develop thus affords means of understanding changes in states and of
recognizing developments not previously seen.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figure
Unveiling the nature of out-of-equilibrium phase transitions in a system with long-range interactions
Recently, there has been some vigorous interest in the out-of-equilibrium
quasistationary states (QSSs), with lifetimes diverging with the number N of
degrees of freedom, emerging from numerical simulations of the ferromagnetic XY
Hamiltonian Mean Field (HMF) starting from some special initial conditions.
Phase transitions have been reported between low-energy magnetized QSSs and
large-energy unexpected, antiferromagnetic-like, QSSs with low magnetization.
This issue is addressed here in the Vlasov N \rightarrow \infty limit. It is
argued that the time-asymptotic states emerging in the Vlasov limit can be
related to simple generic time-asymptotic forms for the force field. The
proposed picture unveils the nature of the out-of-equilibrium phase transitions
reported for the ferromagnetic HMF: this is a bifurcation point connecting an
effective integrable Vlasov one-particle time-asymptotic dynamics to a partly
ergodic one which means a brutal open-up of the Vlasov one-particle phase
space. Illustration is given by investigating the time-asymptotic value of the
magnetization at the phase transition, under the assumption of a sufficiently
rapid time-asymptotic decay of the transient force field
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