4,215 research outputs found
Domain wall theory and non-stationarity in driven flow with exclusion
We study the dynamical evolution toward steady state of the stochastic
non-equilibrium model known as totally asymmetric simple exclusion process, in
both uniform and non-uniform (staggered) one-dimensional systems with open
boundaries. Domain-wall theory and numerical simulations are used and, where
pertinent, their results are compared to existing mean-field predictions and
exact solutions where available. For uniform chains we find that the inclusion
of fluctuations inherent to the domain-wall formulation plays a crucial role in
providing good agreement with simulations, which is severely lacking in the
corresponding mean-field predictions. For alternating-bond chains the
domain-wall predictions for the features of the phase diagram in the parameter
space of injection and ejection rates turn out to be realized only in an
incipient and quantitatively approximate way. Nevertheless, significant
quantitative agreement can be found between several additional domain-wall
theory predictions and numerics.Comment: 12 pages, 12 figures (published version
Correlation--function distributions at the Nishimori point of two-dimensional Ising spin glasses
The multicritical behavior at the Nishimori point of two-dimensional Ising
spin glasses is investigated by using numerical transfer-matrix methods to
calculate probability distributions and associated moments of spin-spin
correlation functions on strips. The angular dependence of the shape of
correlation function distributions provides a stringent test of how well
they obey predictions of conformal invariance; and an even symmetry of reflects the consequences of the Ising spin-glass gauge (Nishimori)
symmetry. We show that conformal invariance is obeyed in its strictest form,
and the associated scaling of the moments of the distribution is examined, in
order to assess the validity of a recent conjecture on the exact localization
of the Nishimori point. Power law divergences of are observed near C=1
and C=0, in partial accord with a simple scaling scheme which preserves the
gauge symmetry.Comment: Final version to be published in Phys Rev
Scaling treatment of the random field Ising model
Analytic phenomenological scaling is carried out for the random field Ising
model in general dimensions using a bar geometry. Domain wall configurations
and their decorated profiles and associated wandering and other exponents
are obtained by free energy minimization. Scaling
between different bar widths provides the renormalization group (RG)
transformation. Its consequences are (1) criticality at in
with correlation length diverging like for and
for , where is a decoration constant; (2) criticality in dimensions at , , where
, .
Finite temperature generalizations are outlined. Numerical transfer matrix
calculations and results from a ground state algorithm adapted for strips in
confirm the ingredients which provide the RG description.Comment: RevTex v3.0, 5 pages, plus 4 figures uuencode
Connectivity-dependent properties of diluted sytems in a transfer-matrix description
We introduce a new approach to connectivity-dependent properties of diluted
systems, which is based on the transfer-matrix formulation of the percolation
problem. It simultaneously incorporates the connective properties reflected in
non-zero matrix elements and allows one to use standard random-matrix
multiplication techniques. Thus it is possible to investigate physical
processes on the percolation structure with the high efficiency and precision
characteristic of transfer-matrix methods, while avoiding disconnections. The
method is illustrated for two-dimensional site percolation by calculating (i)
the critical correlation length along the strip, and the finite-size
longitudinal DC conductivity: (ii) at the percolation threshold, and (iii) very
near the pure-system limit.Comment: 4 pages, no figures, RevTeX, Phys. Rev. E Rapid Communications (to be
published
Prepandemic psychotropic drug status in Portugal: a nationwide pharmacoepidemiological profile
The prescription of psychotropic drugs has been rising in Europe over the last decade. This study provides a comprehensive profile of prepandemic consumption patterns of antidepressant, antipsychotic, and anxiolytic drugs in Portugal considering full nationwide psychotropic drug prescription and dispensing records (2016-2019) against several criteria, including active ingredient, sociodemographics, medical specialty, and incurred costs. An increase of 29.6% and 34.7% in the consumption of antipsychotics and antidepressants between 2016 and 2019 is highlighted, accompanied by an increase of 37M Eur in total expenditure (> 20M Eur in public copay) for these classes of drugs. Disparities in sociodemographic and geographical incidence are identified. Amongst other pivotal results, 64% of psychotropic drug prescriptions are undertaken by general practitioners, while only 21% undertaken by neurological and psychiatric specialties. Nationwide patterns of psychotropic drug prescription further reveal notable trends and determinants, establishing a reference point for cross-regional studies and being currently assessed at a national level to establish psychosocial initiatives and guidelines for medical practice and training.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
- …