159 research outputs found

    Mathematical models for erosion and the optimal transportation of sediment

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    We investigate a mathematical theory for the erosion of sediment which begins with the study of a non-linear, parabolic, weighted 4-Laplace equation on a rectangular domain corresponding to a base segment of an extended landscape. Imposing natural boundary conditions, we show that the equation admits entropy solutions and prove regularity and uniqueness of weak solutions when they exist. We then investigate a particular class of weak solutions studied in previous work of the first author and produce numerical simulations of these solutions. After introducing an optimal transportation problem for the sediment flow, we show that this class of weak solutions implements the optimal transportation of the sediment

    A model for aperiodicity in earthquakes

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    International audienceConditions under which a single oscillator model coupled with Dieterich-Ruina's rate and state dependent friction exhibits chaotic dynamics is studied. Properties of spring-block models are discussed. The parameter values of the system are explored and the corresponding numerical solutions presented. Bifurcation analysis is performed to determine the bifurcations and stability of stationary solutions and we find that the system undergoes a Hopf bifurcation to a periodic orbit. This periodic orbit then undergoes a period doubling cascade into a strange attractor, recognized as broadband noise in the power spectrum. The implications for earthquakes are discussed

    The Paulsen Problem, Continuous Operator Scaling, and Smoothed Analysis

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    The Paulsen problem is a basic open problem in operator theory: Given vectors u1,,unRdu_1, \ldots, u_n \in \mathbb R^d that are ϵ\epsilon-nearly satisfying the Parseval's condition and the equal norm condition, is it close to a set of vectors v1,,vnRdv_1, \ldots, v_n \in \mathbb R^d that exactly satisfy the Parseval's condition and the equal norm condition? Given u1,,unu_1, \ldots, u_n, the squared distance (to the set of exact solutions) is defined as infvi=1nuivi22\inf_{v} \sum_{i=1}^n \| u_i - v_i \|_2^2 where the infimum is over the set of exact solutions. Previous results show that the squared distance of any ϵ\epsilon-nearly solution is at most O(poly(d,n,ϵ))O({\rm{poly}}(d,n,\epsilon)) and there are ϵ\epsilon-nearly solutions with squared distance at least Ω(dϵ)\Omega(d\epsilon). The fundamental open question is whether the squared distance can be independent of the number of vectors nn. We answer this question affirmatively by proving that the squared distance of any ϵ\epsilon-nearly solution is O(d13/2ϵ)O(d^{13/2} \epsilon). Our approach is based on a continuous version of the operator scaling algorithm and consists of two parts. First, we define a dynamical system based on operator scaling and use it to prove that the squared distance of any ϵ\epsilon-nearly solution is O(d2nϵ)O(d^2 n \epsilon). Then, we show that by randomly perturbing the input vectors, the dynamical system will converge faster and the squared distance of an ϵ\epsilon-nearly solution is O(d5/2ϵ)O(d^{5/2} \epsilon) when nn is large enough and ϵ\epsilon is small enough. To analyze the convergence of the dynamical system, we develop some new techniques in lower bounding the operator capacity, a concept introduced by Gurvits to analyze the operator scaling algorithm.Comment: Added Subsection 1.4; Incorporated comments and fixed typos; Minor changes in various place

    Quantum Black Holes

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    Static solutions of large-NN quantum dilaton gravity in 1+11+1 dimensions are analyzed and found to exhibit some unusual behavior. As expected from previous work, infinite-mass solutions are found describing a black hole in equilibrium with a bath of Hawking radiation. Surprisingly, the finite mass solutions are found to approach zero coupling both at the horizon and spatial infinity, with a ``bounce'' off of strong coupling in between. Several new zero mass solutions -- candidate quantum vacua -- are also described.Comment: 14 pages + 6 figure

    Thermal Hair of Quantum Black Hole

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    We investigate the possibility of statistical explanation of the black hole entropy by counting quasi-bounded modes of thermal fluctuation in two dimensional black hole spacetime. The black hole concerned is quantum in the sense that it is in thermal equilibrium with its Hawking radiation. It is shown that the fluctuation around such a black hole obeys a wave equation with a potential whose peaks are located near the black hole and which is caused by quantum effect. We can construct models in which the potential in the above sense has several positive peaks and there are quai-bounded modes confined between these peaks. This suggests that these modes contribute to the black hole entropy. However it is shown that the entropy associated with these modes dose not obey the ordinary area law. Therefore we can call these modes as an additional thermal hair of the quantum black hole.Comment: LaTeX, 12 pages, 14 postscript figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.

    Numerical Analysis of Black Hole Evaporation

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    Black hole formation/evaporation in two-dimensional dilaton gravity can be described, in the limit where the number NN of matter fields becomes large, by a set of second-order partial differential equations. In this paper we solve these equations numerically. It is shown that, contrary to some previous suggestions, black holes evaporate completely a finite time after formation. A boundary condition is required to evolve the system beyond the naked singularity at the evaporation endpoint. It is argued that this may be naturally chosen so as to restore the system to the vacuum. The analysis also applies to the low-energy scattering of SS-wave fermions by four-dimensional extremal, magnetic, dilatonic black holes.Comment: 10 pages, 9 figures in separate uuencoded fil

    Complex-valued Burgers and KdV-Burgers equations

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    Spatially periodic complex-valued solutions of the Burgers and KdV-Burgers equations are studied in this paper. It is shown that for any sufficiently large time T, there exists an explicit initial data such that its corresponding solution of the Burgers equation blows up at T. In addition, the global convergence and regularity of series solutions is established for initial data satisfying mild conditions

    Information Loss and Anomalous Scattering

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    The approach of 't Hooft to the puzzles of black hole evaporation can be applied to a simpler system with analogous features. The system is 1+11+1 dimensional electrodynamics in a linear dilaton background. Analogues of black holes, Hawking radiation and evaporation exist in this system. In perturbation theory there appears to be an information paradox but this gets resolved in the full quantum theory and there exists an exact SS-matrix, which is fully unitary and information conserving. 't Hooft's method gives the leading terms in a systematic approximation to the exact result.Comment: 18 pages, 3 figures (postscript files available soon on request), (earlier version got corrupted by mail system
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