3,389 research outputs found
Crossover from Diffusive to Ballistic Transport in Periodic Quantum Maps
We derive an expression for the mean square displacement of a particle whose
motion is governed by a uniform, periodic, quantum multi-baker map. The
expression is a function of both time, , and Planck's constant, , and
allows a study of both the long time, , and semi-classical,
, limits taken in either order. We evaluate the expression using
random matrix theory as well as numerically, and observe good agreement between
both sets of results. The long time limit shows that particle transport is
generically ballistic, for any fixed value of Planck's constant. However, for
fixed times, the semi-classical limit leads to diffusion. The mean square
displacement for non-zero Planck's constant, and finite time, exhibits a
crossover from diffusive to ballistic motion, with crossover time on the order
of the inverse of Planck's constant. We argue, that these results are generic
for a large class of 1D quantum random walks, similar to the quantum
multi-baker, and that a sufficient condition for diffusion in the
semi-classical limit is classically chaotic dynamics in each cell. Some
connections between our work and the other literature on quantum random walks
are discussed. These walks are of some interest in the theory of quantum
computation.Comment: Final version to appear in Physica D, Proceedings of the
International Workshop and Seminar on Microscopic Chaos and Transport in
Many-Particle Systems, Dresden, 2002; corrected a minor error in section 3.1,
new section 4.
Imprints of log-periodic self-similarity in the stock market
Detailed analysis of the log-periodic structures as precursors of the
financial crashes is presented. The study is mainly based on the German Stock
Index (DAX) variation over the 1998 period which includes both, a spectacular
boom and a large decline, in magnitude only comparable to the so-called Black
Monday of October 1987. The present example provides further arguments in
favour of a discrete scale-invariance governing the dynamics of the stock
market. A related clear log-periodic structure prior to the crash and
consistent with its onset extends over the period of a few months. Furthermore,
on smaller time-scales the data seems to indicate the appearance of analogous
log-periodic oscillations as precursors of the smaller, intermediate decreases.
Even the frequencies of such oscillations are similar on various levels of
resolution. The related value of preferred scaling ratios
is amazingly consistent with those found for a wide variety of other complex
systems. Similar analysis of the major American indices between September 1998
and February 1999 also provides some evidence supporting this concept but, at
the same time, illustrates a possible splitting of the dynamics that a large
market may experience.Comment: 13 pages, LaTeX-REVTeX, 4 PS figures. Significantly extended version
to appear in The European Physical Journal
- β¦