53 research outputs found
Speedy motions of a body immersed in an infinitely extended medium
We study the motion of a classical point body of mass M, moving under the
action of a constant force of intensity E and immersed in a Vlasov fluid of
free particles, interacting with the body via a bounded short range potential
Psi. We prove that if its initial velocity is large enough then the body
escapes to infinity increasing its speed without any bound "runaway effect".
Moreover, the body asymptotically reaches a uniformly accelerated motion with
acceleration E/M. We then discuss at a heuristic level the case in which Psi(r)
diverges at short distances like g r^{-a}, g,a>0, by showing that the runaway
effect still occurs if a<2.Comment: 15 page
Slow motion and metastability for a non local evolution equation
In this paper we consider a non local evolution mean field equation proving the existence of an invariant, unstable, one dimensional manifold connecting the critical droplet with the stable and the metastable phases. We prove that the points on the manifold are droplets longer or shorter than the critical one, and that their motion is very slow in agreement with the theory of metastable patterns
On the propagation of a perturbation in an anharmonic system
We give a not trivial upper bound on the velocity of disturbances in an
infinitely extended anharmonic system at thermal equilibrium. The proof is
achieved by combining a control on the non equilibrium dynamics with an
explicit use of the state invariance with respect to the time evolution.Comment: 14 page
Molecular Dynamics Simulation of Vascular Network Formation
Endothelial cells are responsible for the formation of the capillary blood
vessel network. We describe a system of endothelial cells by means of
two-dimensional molecular dynamics simulations of point-like particles. Cells'
motion is governed by the gradient of the concentration of a chemical substance
that they produce (chemotaxis). The typical time of degradation of the chemical
substance introduces a characteristic length in the system. We show that
point-like model cells form network resembling structures tuned by this
characteristic length, before collapsing altogether. Successively, we improve
the non-realistic point-like model cells by introducing an isotropic strong
repulsive force between them and a velocity dependent force mimicking the
observed peculiarity of endothelial cells to preserve the direction of their
motion (persistence). This more realistic model does not show a clear network
formation. We ascribe this partial fault in reproducing the experiments to the
static geometry of our model cells that, in reality, change their shapes by
elongating toward neighboring cells.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures, 2 of which composite with 8 pictures each.
Accepted on J.Stat.Mech. (2009). Appeared at the poster session of
StatPhys23, Genoa, Italy, July 13 (2007
Resonances and O-curves in Hamiltonian systems
We investigate the problem of the existence of trajectories asymptotic to
elliptic equilibria of Hamiltonian systems in the presence of resonances.Comment: 12 page
A new and stable estimation method of country economic fitness and product complexity
We present a new metric estimating fitness of countries and complexity of
products by exploiting a non-linear non-homogeneous map applied to the publicly
available information on the goods exported by a country. The non homogeneous
terms guarantee both convergence and stability. After a suitable rescaling of
the relevant quantities, the non homogeneous terms are eventually set to zero
so that this new metric is parameter free. This new map almost reproduces the
results of the original homogeneous metrics already defined in literature and
allows for an approximate analytic solution in case of actual binarized
matrices based on the Revealed Comparative Advantage (RCA) indicator. This
solution is connected with a new quantity describing the neighborhood of nodes
in bipartite graphs, representing in this work the relations between countries
and exported products. Moreover, we define the new indicator of country
net-efficiency quantifying how a country efficiently invests in capabilities
able to generate innovative complex high quality products. Eventually, we
demonstrate analytically the local convergence of the algorithm involved.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figure
Vertex Intrinsic Fitness: How to Produce Arbitrary Scale-Free Networks
We study a recent model of random networks based on the presence of an
intrinsic character of the vertices called fitness. The vertices fitnesses are
drawn from a given probability distribution density. The edges between pair of
vertices are drawn according to a linking probability function depending on the
fitnesses of the two vertices involved. We study here different choices for the
probability distribution densities and the linking functions. We find that,
irrespective of the particular choices, the generation of scale-free networks
is straightforward. We then derive the general conditions under which
scale-free behavior appears. This model could then represent a possible
explanation for the ubiquity and robustness of such structures.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, RevTe
The McKean-Vlasov Equation in Finite Volume
We study the McKean--Vlasov equation on the finite tori of length scale
in --dimensions. We derive the necessary and sufficient conditions for the
existence of a phase transition, which are based on the criteria first
uncovered in \cite{GP} and \cite{KM}. Therein and in subsequent works, one
finds indications pointing to critical transitions at a particular model
dependent value, of the interaction parameter. We show that
the uniform density (which may be interpreted as the liquid phase) is
dynamically stable for and prove, abstractly, that a
{\it critical} transition must occur at . However for
this system we show that under generic conditions -- large, and
isotropic interactions -- the phase transition is in fact discontinuous and
occurs at some \theta\t < \theta^{\sharp}. Finally, for H--stable, bounded
interactions with discontinuous transitions we show that, with suitable
scaling, the \theta\t(L) tend to a definitive non--trivial limit as
Soft and hard wall in a stochastic reaction diffusion equation
We consider a stochastically perturbed reaction diffusion equation in a
bounded interval, with boundary conditions imposing the two stable phases at
the endpoints. We investigate the asymptotic behavior of the front separating
the two stable phases, as the intensity of the noise vanishes and the size of
the interval diverges. In particular, we prove that, in a suitable scaling
limit, the front evolves according to a one-dimensional diffusion process with
a non-linear drift accounting for a "soft" repulsion from the boundary. We
finally show how a "hard" repulsion can be obtained by an extra diffusive
scaling.Comment: 33 page
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