170 research outputs found
Emission from dielectric cavities in terms of invariant sets of the chaotic ray dynamics
In this paper, the chaotic ray dynamics inside dielectric cavities is
described by the properties of an invariant chaotic saddle. I show that the
localization of the far field emission in specific directions is related to the
filamentary pattern of the saddle's unstable manifold, along which the energy
inside the cavity is distributed. For cavities with mixed phase space, the
chaotic saddle is divided in hyperbolic and non-hyperbolic components, related,
respectively, to the intermediate exponential (t<t_c) and the asymptotic
power-law (t>t_c) decay of the energy inside the cavity. The alignment of the
manifolds of the two components of the saddle explains why even if the energy
concentration inside the cavity dramatically changes from tt_c, the
far field emission changes only slightly. Simulations in the annular billiard
confirm and illustrate the predictions.Comment: Corrected version, as published. 9 pages, 6 figure
Thermodynamic interpretation of the uniformity of the phase space probability measure
Uniformity of the probability measure of phase space is considered in the
framework of classical equilibrium thermodynamics. For the canonical and the
grand canonical ensembles, relations are given between the phase space
uniformities and thermodynamic potentials, their fluctuations and correlations.
For the binary system in the vicinity of the critical point the uniformity is
interpreted in terms of temperature dependent rates of phases of well defined
uniformities. Examples of a liquid-gas system and the mass spectrum of nuclear
fragments are presented.Comment: 11 pages, 2 figure
Poincare recurrences and transient chaos in systems with leaks
In order to simulate observational and experimental situations, we consider a
leak in the phase space of a chaotic dynamical system. We obtain an expression
for the escape rate of the survival probability applying the theory of
transient chaos. This expression improves previous estimates based on the
properties of the closed system and explains dependencies on the position and
size of the leak and on the initial ensemble. With a subtle choice of the
initial ensemble, we obtain an equivalence to the classical problem of Poincare
recurrences in closed systems, which is treated in the same framework. Finally,
we show how our results apply to weakly chaotic systems and justify a split of
the invariant saddle in hyperbolic and nonhyperbolic components, related,
respectively, to the intermediate exponential and asymptotic power-law decays
of the survival probability.Comment: Corrected version, as published. 12 pages, 9 figure
Memory effects in chaotic advection of inertial particles
A systematic investigation of the effect of the history force on particle advection is carried out for both heavy and light particles. General relations are given to identify parameter regions where the history force is expected to be comparable with the Stokes drag. As an illustrative example, a paradigmatic two-dimensional flow, the von Kármán flow is taken. For small (but not extremely small) particles all investigated dynamical properties turn out to heavily depend on the presence of memory when compared to the memoryless case: the history force generates a rather non-trivial dynamics that appears to weaken (but not to suppress) inertial effects, it enhances the overall contribution of viscosity. We explore the parameter space spanned by the particle size and the density ratio, and find a weaker tendency for accumulation in attractors and for caustics formation. The Lyapunov exponent of transients becomes larger with memory. Periodic attractors are found to have a very slow, type convergence towards the asymptotic form. We find that the concept of snapshot attractors is useful to understand this slow convergence: an ensemble of particles converges exponentially fast towards a snapshot attractor, which undergoes a slow shift for long times
Poincare recurrences from the perspective of transient chaos
We obtain a description of the Poincar\'e recurrences of chaotic systems in
terms of the ergodic theory of transient chaos. It is based on the equivalence
between the recurrence time distribution and an escape time distribution
obtained by leaking the system and taking a special initial ensemble. This
ensemble is atypical in terms of the natural measure of the leaked system, the
conditionally invariant measure. Accordingly, for general initial ensembles,
the average recurrence and escape times are different. However, we show that
the decay rate of these distributions is always the same. Our results remain
valid for Hamiltonian systems with mixed phase space and validate a split of
the chaotic saddle in hyperbolic and non-hyperbolic components.Comment: 4 pages and 4 figures, final published versio
Noise-enhanced trapping in chaotic scattering
We show that noise enhances the trapping of trajectories in scattering
systems. In fully chaotic systems, the decay rate can decrease with increasing
noise due to a generic mismatch between the noiseless escape rate and the value
predicted by the Liouville measure of the exit set. In Hamiltonian systems with
mixed phase space we show that noise leads to a slower algebraic decay due to
trajectories performing a random walk inside Kolmogorov-Arnold-Moser islands.
We argue that these noise-enhanced trapping mechanisms exist in most scattering
systems and are likely to be dominant for small noise intensities, which is
confirmed through a detailed investigation in the Henon map. Our results can be
tested in fluid experiments, affect the fractal Weyl's law of quantum systems,
and modify the estimations of chemical reaction rates based on phase-space
transition state theory.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
Computing fractal dimension in supertransient systems directly, fast and reliable
Chaotic transients occur in many experiments including those in fluids, in
simulations of the plane Couette flow, and in coupled map lattices and they are
a common phenomena in dynamical systems. Superlong chaotic transients are
caused by the presence of chaotic saddles whose stable sets have fractal
dimensions that are close to phase-space dimension. For many physical systems
chaotic saddles have a big impact on laboratory measurements, and it is
important to compute the dimension of such stable sets including fractal basin
boundaries through a direct method. In this work, we present a new method to
compute the dimension of stable sets of chaotic saddles directly, fast, and
reliable.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figure
Diffusion in normal and critical transient chaos
In this paper we investigate deterministic diffusion in systems which are
spatially extended in certain directions but are restricted in size and open in
other directions, consequently particles can escape. We introduce besides the
diffusion coefficient D on the chaotic repeller a coefficient which
measures the broadening of the distribution of trajectories during the
transient chaotic motion. Both coefficients are explicitly computed for
one-dimensional models, and they are found to be different in most cases. We
show furthermore that a jump develops in both of the coefficients for most of
the initial distributions when we approach the critical borderline where the
escape rate equals the Liapunov exponent of a periodic orbit.Comment: 4 pages Revtex file in twocolumn format with 2 included postscript
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