71 research outputs found
Conduction at the onset of chaos
After a general discussion of the thermodynamics of conductive processes, we
introduce specific observables enabling the connection of the diffusive
transport properties with the microscopic dynamics. We solve the case of
Brownian particles, both analytically and numerically, and address then whether
aspects of the classic Onsager's picture generalize to the non-local
non-reversible dynamics described by logistic map iterates. While in the
chaotic case numerical evidence of a monotonic relaxation is found, at the
onset of chaos complex relaxation patterns emerge.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figure
Mixing and approach to equilibrium in the standard map
For a paradigmatic case, the standard map, we discuss how the statistical
description of the approach to equilibrium is related to the sensitivity to the
initial conditions of the system. Using a numerical analysis we present an
anomalous scenario that may give some insight on the foundations of the
Tsallis' statistical mechanics.Comment: Latex, 5 pages, 3 eps figures. Contribution to the proceedings of
NEXT 200
On time and ensemble averages in quasistationary state of low-dimensional Hamiltonian maps
We discuss the relation between ensemble and time averages for
quasistationary states of low-dimensional symplectic maps that present
remarkable analogies with similar states detected in many-body
long-range-interacting Hamiltonian systems.Comment: Communication at lawnp'03, VIII Latin American Workshop on Nonlinear
Phenomena, Salvador, Bahia, Brazil, Sept. 28 - Oct. 3, 2003. Accepted for
publication in Physica A. Elsevier Latex, 7 pages, 5 figure
Scaling and efficiency determine the irreversible evolution of a market
In setting up a stochastic description of the time evolution of a financial
index, the challenge consists in devising a model compatible with all stylized
facts emerging from the analysis of financial time series and providing a
reliable basis for simulating such series. Based on constraints imposed by
market efficiency and on an inhomogeneous-time generalization of standard
simple scaling, we propose an analytical model which accounts simultaneously
for empirical results like the linear decorrelation of successive returns, the
power law dependence on time of the volatility autocorrelation function, and
the multiscaling associated to this dependence. In addition, our approach gives
a justification and a quantitative assessment of the irreversible character of
the index dynamics. This irreversibility enters as a key ingredient in a novel
simulation strategy of index evolution which demonstrates the predictive
potential of the model.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Export dynamics as an optimal growth problem in the network of global economy
We analyze export data aggregated at world global level of 219 classes of products over a period of 39 years. Our main goal is to set up a dynamical model to identify and quantify plausible mechanisms by which the evolutions of the various exports affect each other. This is pursued through a stochastic differential description, partly inspired by approaches used in population dynamics or directed polymers in random media. We outline a complex network of transfer rates which describes how resources are shifted between different product classes, and determines how casual favorable conditions for one export can spread to the other ones. A calibration procedure allows to fit four free model-parameters such that the dynamical evolution becomes consistent with the average growth, the fluctuations, and the ranking of the export values observed in real data. Growth crucially depends on the balance between maintaining and shifting resources to different exports, like in an explore-exploit problem. Remarkably, the calibrated parameters warrant a close-to-maximum growth rate under the transient conditions realized in the period covered by data, implying an optimal self organization of the global export. According to the model, major structural changes in the global economy take tens of years
Nos\'e-Hoover and Langevin thermostats do not reproduce the nonequilibrium behavior of long-range Hamiltonians
We compare simulations performed using the Nos\'e-Hoover and the Langevin
thermostats with the Hamiltonian dynamics of a long-range interacting system in
contact with a reservoir. We find that while the statistical mechanics
equilibrium properties of the system are recovered by all the different
methods, the Nos\'e-Hoover and the Langevin thermostats fail in reproducing the
nonequilibrium behavior of such Hamiltonian.Comment: Contribution to the proceeding of the "International Conference on
the Frontiers of Nonlinear and Complex Systems" in honor of Prof. Bambi Hu,
Hong Kong, May 200
Mesoscopic virial equation for nonequilibrium statistical mechanics
We derive a class of mesoscopic virial equations governing energy partition
between conjugate position and momentum variables of individual degrees of
freedom. They are shown to apply to a wide range of nonequilibrium steady
states with stochastic (Langevin) and deterministic (Nos\'e--Hoover) dynamics,
and to extend to collective modes for models of heat-conducting lattices. A
generalised macroscopic virial theorem ensues upon summation over all degrees
of freedom. This theorem allows for the derivation of nonequilibrium state
equations that involve dissipative heat flows on the same footing with state
variables, as exemplified for inertial Brownian motion with solid friction and
overdamped active Brownian particles subject to inhomogeneous pressure.Comment: 14 pages, 3 figures. Some revision
Finite-size scaling in unbiased translocation dynamics
Finite-size scaling arguments naturally lead us to introduce a
coordinate-dependent diffusion coefficient in a Fokker-Planck description of
the late stage dynamics of unbiased polymer translocation through a membrane
pore. The solution for the probability density function of the chemical
coordinate matches the initial-stage subdiffusive regime and takes into account
the equilibrium entropic drive. Precise scaling relations connect the
subdiffusion exponent to the divergence with the polymer length of the
translocation time, and also to the singularity of the probability density
function at the absorbing boundaries. Quantitative comparisons with numerical
simulation data in strongly support the validity of the model and of the
predicted scalings.Comment: Text revision. Supplemental Material adde
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