2,267 research outputs found
A First-Order Dynamical Transition in the displacement distribution of a Driven Run-and-Tumble Particle
We study the probability distribution of the total displacement
of an -step run and tumble particle on a line, in presence of a
constant nonzero drive . While the central limit theorem predicts a standard
Gaussian form for near its peak, we show that for large positive and
negative , the distribution exhibits anomalous large deviation forms. For
large positive , the associated rate function is nonanalytic at a critical
value of the scaled distance from the peak where its first derivative is
discontinuous. This signals a first-order dynamical phase transition from a
homogeneous `fluid' phase to a `condensed' phase that is dominated by a single
large run. A similar first-order transition occurs for negative large
fluctuations as well. Numerical simulations are in excellent agreement with our
analytical predictions.Comment: 35 pages, 5 figures. An algebraic error in Appendix B of the previous
version of the manuscript has been corrected. A new argument for the location
of the transition is reported in Appendix B.
Some comments on global-local analyses
The main theme concerns methods that may be classified as global (approximate) and local (exact). Some specific applications of these methods are found in: fracture and fatigue analysis of structures with 3-D surface flaws; large-deformation, post-buckling analysis of large space trusses and space frames, and their control; and stresses around holes in composite laminates
Survival probability of an immobile target surrounded by mobile traps
We study analytically, in one dimension, the survival probability
up to time of an immobile target surrounded by mutually noninteracting
traps each performing a continuous-time random walk (CTRW) in continuous space.
We consider a general CTRW with symmetric and continuous (but otherwise
arbitrary) jump length distribution and arbitrary waiting time
distribution . The traps are initially distributed uniformly in
space with density . We prove an exact relation, valid for all time ,
between and the expected maximum of the trap process up to
time , for rather general stochastic motion of each trap.
When represents a general CTRW with arbitrary and
, we are able to compute exactly the first two leading terms in the
asymptotic behavior of for large . This allows us subsequently to
compute the precise asymptotic behavior, , for large , with exact expressions for the stretching exponent
and the constants and for arbitrary CTRW. By choosing
appropriate and , we recover the previously known results
for diffusive and subdiffusive traps. However, our result is more general and
includes, in particular, the superdiffusive traps as well as totally anomalous
traps
Top eigenvalue of a random matrix: large deviations and third order phase transition
We study the fluctuations of the largest eigenvalue of random matrices in the limit of large . The main focus is on
Gaussian -ensembles, including in particular the Gaussian orthogonal
(), unitary () and symplectic () ensembles. The
probability density function (PDF) of consists, for large ,
of a central part described by Tracy-Widom distributions flanked, on both
sides, by two large deviations tails. While the central part characterizes the
typical fluctuations of -- of order --,
the large deviations tails are instead associated to extremely rare
fluctuations -- of order . Here we review some recent developments
in the theory of these extremely rare events using a Coulomb gas approach. We
discuss in particular the third-order phase transition which separates the left
tail from the right tail, a transition akin to the so-called Gross-Witten-Wadia
phase transition found in 2-d lattice quantum chromodynamics. We also discuss
the occurrence of similar third-order transitions in various physical problems,
including non-intersecting Brownian motions, conductance fluctuations in
mesoscopic physics and entanglement in a bipartite system.Comment: 32 pages, 8 figures, contribution to Statphys25 (Seoul, 2013)
proceedings. Revised version where references have been added and typos
correcte
Wigner time-delay distribution in chaotic cavities and freezing transition
Using the joint distribution for proper time-delays of a chaotic cavity
derived by Brouwer, Frahm & Beenakker [Phys. Rev. Lett. {\bf 78}, 4737 (1997)],
we obtain, in the limit of large number of channels , the large deviation
function for the distribution of the Wigner time-delay (the sum of proper
times) by a Coulomb gas method. We show that the existence of a power law tail
originates from narrow resonance contributions, related to a (second order)
freezing transition in the Coulomb gas.Comment: RevTeX, 5 pages, 3 pdf figures ; v2 : Refs. added ; v3 : correction
of a small error in the large deviation function $\Phi_+(s)
The Local and the Occupation Time of a Particle Diffusing in a Random Medium
We consider a particle moving in a one dimensional potential which has a
symmetric deterministic part and a quenched random part. We study analytically
the probability distributions of the local time (spent by the particle around
its mean value) and the occupation time (spent above its mean value) within an
observation time window of size t. The random part of the potential is same as
in the Sinai model, i.e., the potential itself is a random walk in space. In
the absence of the random potential, these distributions have three typical
asymptotic behaviors depending on whether the deterministic potential is
unstable, stable or flat. These asymptotic behaviors are shown to get
drastically modified when the random part of the potential is switched on
leading to the loss of self-averaging and wide sample to sample fluctuations.Comment: 5 pages revtex, two column, minor typos correcte
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