808 research outputs found
How multiplicity determines entropy and the derivation of the maximum entropy principle for complex systems
The maximum entropy principle (MEP) is a method for obtaining the most likely
distribution functions of observables from statistical systems, by maximizing
entropy under constraints. The MEP has found hundreds of applications in
ergodic and Markovian systems in statistical mechanics, information theory, and
statistics. For several decades there exists an ongoing controversy whether the
notion of the maximum entropy principle can be extended in a meaningful way to
non-extensive, non-ergodic, and complex statistical systems and processes. In
this paper we start by reviewing how Boltzmann-Gibbs-Shannon entropy is related
to multiplicities of independent random processes. We then show how the
relaxation of independence naturally leads to the most general entropies that
are compatible with the first three Shannon-Khinchin axioms, the
(c,d)-entropies. We demonstrate that the MEP is a perfectly consistent concept
for non-ergodic and complex statistical systems if their relative entropy can
be factored into a generalized multiplicity and a constraint term. The problem
of finding such a factorization reduces to finding an appropriate
representation of relative entropy in a linear basis. In a particular example
we show that path-dependent random processes with memory naturally require
specific generalized entropies. The example is the first exact derivation of a
generalized entropy from the microscopic properties of a path-dependent random
process.Comment: 6 pages, 1 figure. To appear in PNA
Topology without cooling: instantons and monopoles near to deconfinement
In an attempt to describe the change of topological structure of pure SU(2)
gauge theory near deconfinement a renormalization group inspired method is
tested. Instead of cooling, blocking and subsequent inverse blocking is applied
to Monte Carlo configurations to capture topological features at a well-defined
scale. We check that this procedure largely conserves long range physics like
string tension. UV fluctuations and lattice artefacts are removed which
otherwise spoil topological charge density and Abelian monopole currents. We
report the behaviour of topological susceptibility and monopole current
densities across the deconfinement transition and relate the two faces of
topology to each other. First results of a cluster analysis are described.Comment: 6 pages, 8 figures, LaTeX with espcrc2.sty. Talk and poster presented
at Lattice97, Edinburgh, 22-26 July 1997, to appear in Nucl. Phys. B
(Proc.Suppl.
Towards a Topological Mechanism of Quark Confinement
We report on new analyses of the topological and chiral vacuum structure of
four-dimensional QCD on the lattice. Correlation functions as well as
visualization of monopole currents in the maximally Abelian gauge emphasize
their topological origin and gauge invariant characterization. The
(anti)selfdual character of strong vacuum fluctuations is reveiled by
smoothing. In full QCD, (anti)instanton positions are also centers of the local
chiral condensate and quark charge density. Most results turn out generically
independent of the action and the cooling/smoothing method.Comment: 14 pages, Contribution to YKIS9
Scaling-violation phenomena and fractality in the human posture control systems
By analyzing the movements of quiet standing persons by means of wavelet
statistics, we observe multiple scaling regions in the underlying body
dynamics. The use of the wavelet-variance function opens the possibility to
relate scaling violations to different modes of posture control. We show that
scaling behavior becomes close to perfect, when correctional movements are
dominated by the vestibular system.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures, to appear in Phys. Rev.
Coexistence of monopoles and instantons for different topological charge definitions and lattice actions
We compute instanton sizes and study correlation functions between instantons
and monopoles in maximum abelian projection within SU(2) lattice QCD at finite
temperature. We compare several definitions of the topological charge,
different lattice actions and methods of reducing quantum fluctuations. The
average instanton size turns out to be fm. The correlation
length between monopoles and instantons is fm and hardly
affected by lattice artifacts as dislocations. We visualize several specific
gauge field configurations and show directly that there is an enhanced
probability for finding monopole loops in the vicinity of instantons. This
feature is independent of the topological charge definition used.Comment: 10 pages, LaTeX, uses elsart.sty and elsart12.sty, 16 eps files, 4
figures, published, for corresponding movies (MPEG) see
http://www.tuwien.ac.at/e142/Lat/qcd.htm
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