1,664 research outputs found

    Atomistic simulations of rare events using gentlest ascent dynamics

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    The dynamics of complex systems often involve thermally activated barrier crossing events that allow these systems to move from one basin of attraction on the high dimensional energy surface to another. Such events are ubiquitous, but challenging to simulate using conventional simulation tools, such as molecular dynamics. Recently, Weinan E et al. [Nonlinearity, 24(6),1831(2011)] proposed a set of dynamic equations, the gentlest ascent dynamics (GAD), to describe the escape of a system from a basin of attraction and proved that solutions of GAD converge to index-1 saddle points of the underlying energy. In this paper, we extend GAD to enable finite temperature simulations in which the system hops between different saddle points on the energy surface. An effective strategy to use GAD to sample an ensemble of low barrier saddle points located in the vicinity of a locally stable configuration on the high dimensional energy surface is proposed. The utility of the method is demonstrated by studying the low barrier saddle points associated with point defect activity on a surface. This is done for two representative systems, namely, (a) a surface vacancy and ad-atom pair and (b) a heptamer island on the (111) surface of copper.Comment: total 30 page

    Multiscale Adaptive Representation of Signals: I. The Basic Framework

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    We introduce a framework for designing multi-scale, adaptive, shift-invariant frames and bi-frames for representing signals. The new framework, called AdaFrame, improves over dictionary learning-based techniques in terms of computational efficiency at inference time. It improves classical multi-scale basis such as wavelet frames in terms of coding efficiency. It provides an attractive alternative to dictionary learning-based techniques for low level signal processing tasks, such as compression and denoising, as well as high level tasks, such as feature extraction for object recognition. Connections with deep convolutional networks are also discussed. In particular, the proposed framework reveals a drawback in the commonly used approach for visualizing the activations of the intermediate layers in convolutional networks, and suggests a natural alternative

    Generalized Flows, Intrinsic Stochasticity, and Turbulent Transport

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    The study of passive scalar transport in a turbulent velocity field leads naturally to the notion of generalized flows which are families of probability distributions on the space of solutions to the associated ODEs, which no longer satisfy the uniqueness theorem for ODEs. Two most natural regularizations of this problem, namely the regularization via adding small molecular diffusion and the regularization via smoothing out the velocity field are considered. White-in-time random velocity fields are used as an example to examine the variety of phenomena that take place when the velocity field is not spatially regular. Three different regimes characterized by their degrees of compressibility are isolated in the parameter space. In the regime of intermediate compressibility, the two different regularizations give rise to two different scaling behavior for the structure functions of the passive scalar. Physically this means that the scaling depends on Prandtl number. In the other two regimes the two different regularizations give rise to the same generalized flows even though the sense of convergence can be very different. The ``one force, one solution'' principle and the existence and uniqueness of an invariant measure are established for the scalar field in the weakly compressible regime, and for the difference of the scalar in the strongly compressible regime.Comment: revised version, 16 pages, no figure
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