1,420 research outputs found
A Paradox of State-Dependent Diffusion and How to Resolve It
Consider a particle diffusing in a confined volume which is divided into two
equal regions. In one region the diffusion coefficient is twice the value of
the diffusion coefficient in the other region. Will the particle spend equal
proportions of time in the two regions in the long term? Statistical mechanics
would suggest yes, since the number of accessible states in each region is
presumably the same. However, another line of reasoning suggests that the
particle should spend less time in the region with faster diffusion, since it
will exit that region more quickly. We demonstrate with a simple microscopic
model system that both predictions are consistent with the information given.
Thus, specifying the diffusion rate as a function of position is not enough to
characterize the behaviour of a system, even assuming the absence of external
forces. We propose an alternative framework for modelling diffusive dynamics in
which both the diffusion rate and equilibrium probability density for the
position of the particle are specified by the modeller. We introduce a
numerical method for simulating dynamics in our framework that samples from the
equilibrium probability density exactly and is suitable for discontinuous
diffusion coefficients.Comment: 21 pages, 6 figures. Second round of revisions. This is the version
that will appear in Proc Roy So
Renormalization group structure for sums of variables generated by incipiently chaotic maps
We look at the limit distributions of sums of deterministic chaotic variables
in unimodal maps and find a remarkable renormalization group (RG) structure
associated to the operation of increment of summands and rescaling. In this
structure - where the only relevant variable is the difference in control
parameter from its value at the transition to chaos - the trivial fixed point
is the Gaussian distribution and a novel nontrivial fixed point is a
multifractal distribution that emulates the Feigenbaum attractor, and is
universal in the sense of the latter. The crossover between the two fixed
points is explained and the flow toward the trivial fixed point is seen to be
comparable to the chaotic band merging sequence. We discuss the nature of the
Central Limit Theorem for deterministic variables.Comment: 14 pages, 5 figures, to appear in Journal of Statistical Mechanic
Diffusion in Curved Spacetimes
Using simple kinematical arguments, we derive the Fokker-Planck equation for
diffusion processes in curved spacetimes. In the case of Brownian motion, it
coincides with Eckart's relativistic heat equation (albeit in a simpler form),
and therefore provides a microscopic justification for his phenomenological
heat-flux ansatz. Furthermore, we obtain the small-time asymptotic expansion of
the mean square displacement of Brownian motion in static spacetimes. Beyond
general relativity itself, this result has potential applications in analogue
gravitational systems.Comment: 14 pages, substantially revised versio
Decoherence from internal degrees of freedom for cluster of mesoparticles : a hierarchy of master equations
A mesoscopic evolution equation for an ensemble of mesoparticles follows
after the elimination of internal degrees of freedom. If the system is composed
of a hierarchy of scales, the reduction procedure could be worked repeatedly
and the characterization of this iterating method is carried out. Namely, a
prescription describing a discrete hierarchy of master equations for the
density operator is obtained. Decoherence follows from the irreversible
coupling of the systems, defined by mesoscopic variables, to internal degrees
of freedom. We discuss briefly the existence of systems with the same dynamics
laws at different scales. We made an explicit calculation for an ensemble of
particles with internal harmonic interaction in an external anharmonic field.
New conditions related to the semiclassical limit for mesoscopic systems
(Wigner-function) are conjectured.Comment: 19 pages, 0 figures, late
Overdamping by weakly coupled environments
A quantum system weakly interacting with a fast environment usually undergoes
a relaxation with complex frequencies whose imaginary parts are damping rates
quadratic in the coupling to the environment, in accord with Fermi's ``Golden
Rule''. We show for various models (spin damped by harmonic-oscillator or
random-matrix baths, quantum diffusion, quantum Brownian motion) that upon
increasing the coupling up to a critical value still small enough to allow for
weak-coupling Markovian master equations, a new relaxation regime can occur. In
that regime, complex frequencies lose their real parts such that the process
becomes overdamped. Our results call into question the standard belief that
overdamping is exclusively a strong coupling feature.Comment: 4 figures; Paper submitted to Phys. Rev.
Pokrovsky-Talapov Model at finite temperature: a renormalization-group analysis
We calculate the finite-temperature shift of the critical wavevector
of the Pokrovsky-Talapov model using a renormalization-group analysis.
Separating the Hamiltonian into a part that is renormalized and one that is
not, we obtain the flow equations for the stiffness and an arbitrary potential.
We then specialize to the case of a cosine potential, and compare our results
to well-known results for the sine-Gordon model, to which our model reduces in
the limit of vanishing driving wavevector Q=0. Our results may be applied to
describe the commensurate-incommensurate phase transition in several physical
systems and allow for a more realistic comparison with experiments, which are
always carried out at a finite temperature
Mean first passage time for nuclear fission and the emission of light particles
The concept of a mean first passage time is used to study the time lapse over
which a fissioning system may emit light particles. The influence of the
"transient" and "saddle to scission times" on this emission are critically
examined. It is argued that within the limits of Kramers' picture of fission no
enhancement over that given by his rate formula need to be considered.Comment: 4 pages, RevTex, 4 postscript figures; with correction of misprints;
appeared in Phys. Rev. Lett.90.13270
Relaxation Phenomena in a System of Two Harmonic Oscillators
We study the process by which quantum correlations are created when an
interaction Hamiltonian is repeatedly applied to a system of two harmonic
oscillators for some characteristic time interval. We show that, for the case
where the oscillator frequencies are equal, the initial Maxwell-Boltzmann
distributions of the uncoupled parts evolve to a new equilibrium
Maxwell-Boltzmann distribution through a series of transient Maxwell-Boltzmann
distributions. Further, we discuss why the equilibrium reached when the two
oscillator frequencies are unequal, is not a thermal one. All the calculations
are exact and the results are obtained through an iterative process, without
using perturbation theory.Comment: 22 pages, 6 Figures, Added contents, to appear in PR
Three-state herding model of the financial markets
We propose a Markov jump process with the three-state herding interaction. We
see our approach as an agent-based model for the financial markets. Under
certain assumptions this agent-based model can be related to the stochastic
description exhibiting sophisticated statistical features. Along with power-law
probability density function of the absolute returns we are able to reproduce
the fractured power spectral density, which is observed in the high-frequency
financial market data. Given example of consistent agent-based and stochastic
modeling will provide background for the further developments in the research
of complex social systems.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figure
Lindblad rate equations
In this paper we derive an extra class of non-Markovian master equations
where the system state is written as a sum of auxiliary matrixes whose
evolution involve Lindblad contributions with local coupling between all of
them, resembling the structure of a classical rate equation. The system
dynamics may develops strong non-local effects such as the dependence of the
stationary properties with the system initialization. These equations are
derived from alternative microscopic interactions, such as complex environments
described in a generalized Born-Markov approximation and tripartite
system-environment interactions, where extra unobserved degrees of freedom
mediates the entanglement between the system and a Markovian reservoir.
Conditions that guarantees the completely positive condition of the solution
map are found. Quantum stochastic processes that recover the system dynamics in
average are formulated. We exemplify our results by analyzing the dynamical
action of non-trivial structured dephasing and depolarizing reservoirs over a
single qubit.Comment: 12 pages, 2 figure
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