160 research outputs found
A continuous time random walk model of transport in variably saturated heterogeneous porous media
We propose a unified physical framework for transport in variably saturated
porous media. This approach allows fluid flow and solute migration to be
treated as ensemble averages of fluid and solute particles, respectively. We
consider the cases of homogeneous and heterogeneous porous materials. Within a
fractal mobile-immobile (MIM) continuous time random walk framework, the
heterogeneity will be characterized by algebraically decaying particle
retention-times. We derive the corresponding (nonlinear) continuum limit
partial differential equations and we compare their solutions to Monte Carlo
simulation results. The proposed methodology is fairly general and can be used
to track fluid and solutes particles trajectories, for a variety of initial and
boundary conditions.Comment: 12 pages, 9 figure
Counting statistics: a Feynman-Kac perspective
By building upon a Feynman-Kac formalism, we assess the distribution of the
number of hits in a given region for a broad class of discrete-time random
walks with scattering and absorption. We derive the evolution equation for the
generating function of the number of hits, and complete our analysis by
examining the moments of the distribution, and their relation to the walker
equilibrium density. Some significant applications are discussed in detail: in
particular, we revisit the gambler's ruin problem and generalize to random
walks with absorption the arcsine law for the number of hits on the half-line.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figure
Universal properties of branching random walks in confined geometries
Characterizing the occupation statistics of a radiation flow through confined
geometries is key to such technological issues as nuclear reactor design and
medical diagnosis. This amounts to assessing the distribution of the travelled
length and the number of collisions performed by the underlying
stochastic transport process, for which remarkably simple Cauchy-like formulas
were established in the case of branching Pearson random walks with
exponentially distributed jumps. In this Letter, we show that such formulas
strikingly carry over to the much broader class of branching processes with
arbitrary jumps, provided that scattering is isotropic and the average jump
size is finite.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
The critical catastrophe revisited
The neutron population in a prototype model of nuclear reactor can be
described in terms of a collection of particles confined in a box and
undergoing three key random mechanisms: diffusion, reproduction due to
fissions, and death due to absorption events. When the reactor is operated at
the critical point, and fissions are exactly compensated by absorptions, the
whole neutron population might in principle go to extinction because of the
wild fluctuations induced by births and deaths. This phenomenon, which has been
named critical catastrophe, is nonetheless never observed in practice: feedback
mechanisms acting on the total population, such as human intervention, have a
stabilizing effect. In this work, we revisit the critical catastrophe by
investigating the spatial behaviour of the fluctuations in a confined geometry.
When the system is free to evolve, the neutrons may display a wild patchiness
(clustering). On the contrary, imposing a population control on the total
population acts also against the local fluctuations, and may thus inhibit the
spatial clustering. The effectiveness of population control in quenching
spatial fluctuations will be shown to depend on the competition between the
mixing time of the neutrons (i.e., the average time taken for a particle to
explore the finite viable space) and the extinction time.Comment: 16 pages, 6 figure
A model of dispersive transport across sharp interfaces between porous materials
Recent laboratory experiments on solute migration in composite porous columns
have shown an asymmetry in the solute arrival time upon reversal of the flow
direction, which is not explained by current paradigms of transport. In this
work, we propose a definition for the solute flux across sharp interfaces and
explore the underlying microscopic particle dynamics by applying Monte Carlo
simulation. Our results are consistent with previous experimental findings and
explain the observed transport asymmetry. An interpretation of the proposed
physical mechanism in terms of a flux rectification is also provided. The
approach is quite general and can be extended to other situations involving
transport across sharp interfaces.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Properties of branching exponential flights in bounded domains
Branching random flights are key to describing the evolution of many physical
and biological systems, ranging from neutron multiplication to gene mutations.
When their paths evolve in bounded regions, we establish a relation between the
properties of trajectories starting on the boundary and those starting inside
the domain. Within this context, we show that the total length travelled by the
walker and the number of performed collisions in bounded volumes can be
assessed by resorting to the Feynman-Kac formalism. Other physical observables
related to the branching trajectories, such as the survival and escape
probability, are derived as well.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure
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