1,914 research outputs found

    Optimal search strategies of space-time coupled random walkers with finite lifetimes

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    We present a simple paradigm for detection of an immobile target by a space-time coupled random walker with a finite lifetime. The motion of the walker is characterized by linear displacements at a fixed speed and exponentially distributed duration, interrupted by random changes in the direction of motion and resumption of motion in the new direction with the same speed. We call these walkers "mortal creepers". A mortal creeper may die at any time during its motion according to an exponential decay law characterized by a finite mean death rate ωm\omega_m. While still alive, the creeper has a finite mean frequency ω\omega of change of the direction of motion. In particular, we consider the efficiency of the target search process, characterized by the probability that the creeper will eventually detect the target. Analytic results confirmed by numerical results show that there is an ωm\omega_m-dependent optimal frequency ω=ωopt\omega=\omega_{opt} that maximizes the probability of eventual target detection. We work primarily in one-dimensional (d=1d=1) domains and examine the role of initial conditions and of finite domain sizes. Numerical results in d=2d=2 domains confirm the existence of an optimal frequency of change of direction, thereby suggesting that the observed effects are robust to changes in dimensionality. In the d=1d=1 case, explicit expressions for the probability of target detection in the long time limit are given. In the case of an infinite domain, we compute the detection probability for arbitrary times and study its early- and late-time behavior. We further consider the survival probability of the target in the presence of many independent creepers beginning their motion at the same location and at the same time. We also consider a version of the standard "target problem" in which many creepers start at random locations at the same time.Comment: 18 pages, 7 figures. The title has been changed with respect to the one in the previous versio

    Anomalous diffusion in a random nonlinear oscillator due to high frequencies of the noise

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    We study the long time behaviour of a nonlinear oscillator subject to a random multiplicative noise with a spectral density (or power-spectrum) that decays as a power law at high frequencies. When the dissipation is negligible, physical observables, such as the amplitude, the velocity and the energy of the oscillator grow as power-laws with time. We calculate the associated scaling exponents and we show that their values depend on the asymptotic behaviour of the external potential and on the high frequencies of the noise. Our results are generalized to include dissipative effects and additive noise.Comment: Expanded version of Proceedings StatPhys-Kolkata V

    Escape of a Uniform Random Walk from an Interval

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    We study the first-passage properties of a random walk in the unit interval in which the length of a single step is uniformly distributed over the finite range [-a,a]. For a of the order of one, the exit probabilities to each edge of the interval and the exit time from the interval exhibit anomalous properties stemming from the change in the minimum number of steps to escape the interval as a function of the starting point. As a decreases, first-passage properties approach those of continuum diffusion, but non-diffusive effects remain because of residual discreteness effectsComment: 8 pages, 8 figures, 2 column revtex4 forma
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