287 research outputs found
From random walk to single-file diffusion
We report an experimental study of diffusion in a quasi-one-dimensional (q1D)
colloid suspension which behaves like a Tonks gas. The mean squared
displacement as a function of time is described well with an ansatz
encompassing a time regime that is both shorter and longer than the mean time
between collisions. This ansatz asserts that the inverse mean squared
displacement is the sum of the inverse mean squared displacement for short time
normal diffusion (random walk) and the inverse mean squared displacement for
asymptotic single-file diffusion (SFD). The dependence of the single-file 1D
mobility on the concentration of the colloids agrees quantitatively with that
derived for a hard rod model, which confirms for the first time the validity of
the hard rod SFD theory. We also show that a recent SFD theory by Kollmann
leads to the hard rod SFD theory for a Tonks gas.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Evaluation of regional climate models performance in simulating rainfall climatology of Jemma sub-basin, Upper Blue Nile Basin, Ethiopia
This study examines the performance of 10 Regional Climate Model (RCM) outputs which are dynamically downscaled from the fifth phase of Coupled Model Inter-comparison Project (CMIP5) GCMs using different RCMs parameterization approaches. The RCMs are evaluated based on their ability to reproduce the magnitude and pattern of monthly and annual rainfall, characteristics of rainfall events and variability related to Sea Surface Temperature (SST) for the period 1981–2005. The outputs of all RCMs showed wet bias, particularly in the higher elevation areas of the sub-basin. Wet bias of annual rainfall ranges from 9.60% in CCLM4 (HadGEM2-ES) model to 110.9% in RCA4 (EC-EARTH) model. JJAS (June-September) rainfall is also characterized by wet bias ranges from 0.76% in REMO (MPI-ESM-LR) model to 100.7% in RCA4 (HadGEM2-ES) model. GCMs that were dynamically downscaled through REMO (Max Planck Institute) and CCLM4 (Climate Limited-Area Modeling) performed better in capturing the rainfall climatology and distribution of rainfall events. However, GCMs dynamically downscaled using RCA4 (SMHI Rossby Center Regional Atmospheric Model) were characterized by overestimation and there are more extreme rainfall events in the cumulative distribution. Most of the RCMs’ rainfall over the sub-basin showed a teleconnection with Sea Surface Temperature (SST) of CMIP5 GCMs in the Pacific and Indian Oceans, but weak. The ensemble mean of all 10 RCMs simulations was superior in capturing the seasonal pattern of the rainfall and had better correlation with observed annual (Correl = 0.6) and JJAS season rainfall (Correl = 0.5) than any single model (S-RCM). We recommend using GCMs downscaled using REMO and CCLM4 RCMs and stations based statistical bias correction to manage elevation based biases of RCMs in the Upper Blue Nile Basin, specifically in the Jemma sub-basin
Complex Patterns in Reaction-Diffusion Systems: A Tale of Two Front Instabilities
Two front instabilities in a reaction-diffusion system are shown to lead to
the formation of complex patterns. The first is an instability to transverse
modulations that drives the formation of labyrinthine patterns. The second is a
Nonequilibrium Ising-Bloch (NIB) bifurcation that renders a stationary planar
front unstable and gives rise to a pair of counterpropagating fronts. Near the
NIB bifurcation the relation of the front velocity to curvature is highly
nonlinear and transitions between counterpropagating fronts become feasible.
Nonuniformly curved fronts may undergo local front transitions that nucleate
spiral-vortex pairs. These nucleation events provide the ingredient needed to
initiate spot splitting and spiral turbulence. Similar spatio-temporal
processes have been observed recently in the ferrocyanide-iodate-sulfite
reaction.Comment: Text: 14 pages compressed Postscript (90kb) Figures: 9 pages
compressed Postscript (368kb
Propagation Failure in Excitable Media
We study a mechanism of pulse propagation failure in excitable media where
stable traveling pulse solutions appear via a subcritical pitchfork
bifurcation. The bifurcation plays a key role in that mechanism. Small
perturbations, externally applied or from internal instabilities, may cause
pulse propagation failure (wave breakup) provided the system is close enough to
the bifurcation point. We derive relations showing how the pitchfork
bifurcation is unfolded by weak curvature or advective field perturbations and
use them to demonstrate wave breakup. We suggest that the recent observations
of wave breakup in the Belousov-Zhabotinsky reaction induced either by an
electric field or a transverse instability are manifestations of this
mechanism.Comment: 8 pages. Aric Hagberg: http://cnls.lanl.gov/~aric; Ehud
Meron:http://www.bgu.ac.il/BIDR/research/staff/meron.htm
From Labyrinthine Patterns to Spiral Turbulence
A new mechanism for spiral vortex nucleation in nongradient reaction
diffusion systems is proposed. It involves two key ingredients: An Ising-Bloch
type front bifurcation and an instability of a planar front to transverse
perturbations. Vortex nucleation by this mechanism plays an important role in
inducing a transition from labyrinthine patterns to spiral turbulence. PACS
numbers: 05.45.+b, 82.20.MjComment: 4 pages uuencoded compressed postscrip
Phase Dynamics of Nearly Stationary Patterns in Activator-Inhibitor Systems
The slow dynamics of nearly stationary patterns in a FitzHugh-Nagumo model
are studied using a phase dynamics approach. A Cross-Newell phase equation
describing slow and weak modulations of periodic stationary solutions is
derived. The derivation applies to the bistable, excitable, and the Turing
unstable regimes. In the bistable case stability thresholds are obtained for
the Eckhaus and the zigzag instabilities and for the transition to traveling
waves. Neutral stability curves demonstrate the destabilization of stationary
planar patterns at low wavenumbers to zigzag and traveling modes. Numerical
solutions of the model system support the theoretical findings
Domain Walls in Non-Equilibrium Systems and the Emergence of Persistent Patterns
Domain walls in equilibrium phase transitions propagate in a preferred
direction so as to minimize the free energy of the system. As a result, initial
spatio-temporal patterns ultimately decay toward uniform states. The absence of
a variational principle far from equilibrium allows the coexistence of domain
walls propagating in any direction. As a consequence, *persistent* patterns may
emerge. We study this mechanism of pattern formation using a non-variational
extension of Landau's model for second order phase transitions. PACS numbers:
05.70.Fh, 42.65.Pc, 47.20.Ky, 82.20MjComment: 12 pages LaTeX, 5 postscript figures To appear in Phys. Rev.
Order Parameter Equations for Front Transitions: Planar and Circular Fronts
Near a parity breaking front bifurcation, small perturbations may reverse the
propagation direction of fronts. Often this results in nonsteady asymptotic
motion such as breathing and domain breakup. Exploiting the time scale
differences of an activator-inhibitor model and the proximity to the front
bifurcation, we derive equations of motion for planar and circular fronts. The
equations involve a translational degree of freedom and an order parameter
describing transitions between left and right propagating fronts.
Perturbations, such as a space dependent advective field or uniform curvature
(axisymmetric spots), couple these two degrees of freedom. In both cases this
leads to a transition from stationary to oscillating fronts as the parity
breaking bifurcation is approached. For axisymmetric spots, two additional
dynamic behaviors are found: rebound and collapse.Comment: 9 pages. Aric Hagberg: http://t7.lanl.gov/People/Aric/; Ehud Meron:
http://www.bgu.ac.il/BIDR/research/staff/meron.htm
Stratified spatiotemporal chaos in anisotropic reaction-diffusion systems
Numerical simulations of two dimensional pattern formation in an anisotropic
bistable reaction-diffusion medium reveal a new dynamical state, stratified
spatiotemporal chaos, characterized by strong correlations along one of the
principal axes. Equations that describe the dependence of front motion on the
angle illustrate the mechanism leading to stratified chaos
Dynamic Front Transitions and Spiral-Vortex Nucleation
This is a study of front dynamics in reaction diffusion systems near
Nonequilibrium Ising-Bloch bifurcations. We find that the relation between
front velocity and perturbative factors, such as external fields and curvature,
is typically multivalued. This unusual form allows small perturbations to
induce dynamic transitions between counter-propagating fronts and nucleate
spiral vortices. We use these findings to propose explanations for a few
numerical and experimental observations including spiral breakup driven by
advective fields, and spot splitting
- …