4,847 research outputs found
Evidence of crossover phenomena in wind speed data
In this report, a systematic analysis of hourly wind speed data obtained from
three potential wind generation sites (in North Dakota) is analyzed. The power
spectra of the data exhibited a power-law decay characteristic of
processes with possible long-range correlations. Conventional
analysis using Hurst exponent estimators proved to be inconclusive. Subsequent
analysis using detrended fluctuation analysis (DFA) revealed a crossover in the
scaling exponent (). At short time scales, a scaling exponent of
indicated that the data resembled Brownian noise, whereas for
larger time scales the data exhibited long range correlations (). The scaling exponents obtained were similar across the three locations.
Our findings suggest the possibility of multiple scaling exponents
characteristic of multifractal signals
A Multifractal Description of Wind Speed Records
In this paper, a systematic analysis of hourly wind speed data obtained from
four potential wind generation sites in North Dakota is conducted. The power
spectra of the data exhibited a power law decay characteristic of
processes with possible long range correlations. The temporal
scaling properties of the records were studied using multifractal detrended
fluctuation analysis {\em MFDFA}. It is seen that the records at all four
locations exhibit similar scaling behavior which is also reflected in the
multifractal spectrum determined under the assumption of a binomial
multiplicative cascade model
Spatial Structures and Giant Number Fluctuations in Models of Active Matter
The large scale fluctuations of the ordered state in active matter systems
are usually characterised by studying the "giant number fluctuations" of
particles in any finite volume, as compared to the expectations from the
central limit theorem. However, in ordering systems, the fluctuations in
density ordering are often captured through their structure functions deviating
from Porod law. In this paper we study the relationship between giant number
fluctuations and structure functions, for different models of active matter as
well as other non-equilibrium systems. A unified picture emerges, with
different models falling in four distinct classes depending on the nature of
their structure functions. For one class, we show that experimentalists may
find Porod law violation, by measuring subleading corrections to the number
fluctuations.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Effect of Landauer's blowtorch on the equilibration rate in a bistable potential
Kinetic aspect of Landauer's blowtorch effect is investigated for a model
double-well potential with localized heating. Using the supersymmetric
approach, we derive an approximate analytical expression for the equilibration
rate as function of the strength, width and the position of the hot zone, and
the barrier height. We find that the presence of the hot zone enhances the
equilibration rate, which is found to be an increasing function of the strength
and width of the hot zone. Our calculations also reveal an intriguing result,
namely, that placing the hot zone away from the top of the potential barrier
enhances the rate more than when it is placed close to it. A physically
plausible explanation for this is attempted. The above analytical results are
borne out by detailed numerical solution of the associated Smoluchowski
equation for the inhomogeneous medium.Comment: 15 pages in LaTeX format and 6 figures in postscript E-Mail :
[email protected] [email protected]
Violation of Porod law in a freely cooling granular gas in one dimension
We study a model of freely cooling inelastic granular gas in one dimension,
with a restitution coefficient which approaches the elastic limit below a
relative velocity scale v. While at early times (t << 1/v) the gas behaves as a
completely inelastic sticky gas conforming to predictions of earlier studies,
at late times (t >> 1/v) it exhibits a new fluctuation dominated phase ordering
state. We find distinct scaling behavior for the (i) density distribution
function, (ii) occupied and empty gap distribution functions, (iii) the density
structure function and (iv) the velocity structure function, as compared to the
completely inelastic sticky gas. The spatial structure functions (iii) and (iv)
violate the Porod law. Within a mean-field approximation, the exponents
describing the structure functions are related to those describing the spatial
gap distribution functions.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
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