446 research outputs found
Random Walk Access Times on Partially-Disordered Complex Networks: an Effective Medium Theory
An analytic effective medium theory is constructed to study the mean access
times for random walks on hybrid disordered structures formed by embedding
complex networks into regular lattices, considering transition rates that
are different for steps across lattice bonds from the rates across network
shortcuts. The theory is developed for structures with arbitrary shortcut
distributions and applied to a class of partially-disordered traversal enhanced
networks in which shortcuts of fixed length are distributed randomly with
finite probability. Numerical simulations are found to be in excellent
agreement with predictions of the effective medium theory on all aspects
addressed by the latter. Access times for random walks on these partially
disordered structures are compared to those on small-world networks, which on
average appear to provide the most effective means of decreasing access times
uniformly across the network.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figures; added new results and discussion; added appendix
on numerical procedures. To appear in PR
Extensions of Effective Medium Theory of Transport in Disordered Systems
Effective medium theory of transport in disordered systems, whose basis is
the replacement of spatial disorder by temporal memory, is extended in several
practical directions. Restricting attention to a 1-dimensional system with bond
disorder for specificity, a transformation procedure is developed to deduce,
from given distribution functions characterizing the system disorder, explicit
expressions for the memory functions. It is shown how to use the memory
functions in the Lapace domain forms in which they first appear, and in the
time domain forms which are obtained via numerical inversion algorithms, to
address time evolution of the system beyond the asymptotic domain of large
times normally treated. An analytic but approximate procedure is provided to
obtain the memories, in addition to the inversion algorithm. Good agreement of
effective medium theory predictions with numerically computed exact results is
found for all time ranges for the distributions used except near the
percolation limit as expected. The use of ensemble averages is studied for
normal as well as correlation observables. The effect of size on effective
mediumtheory is explored and it is shown that, even in the asymptotic limit,
finite size corrections develop to the well known harmonic mean prescription
for finding the effective rate. A percolation threshold is shown to arise even
in 1-d for finite (but not infinite) systems at a concentration of broken bonds
related to the system size. Spatially long range transfer rates are shown to
emerge naturally as a consequence of the replacement of spatial disorder by
temporal memories, in spite of the fact that the original rates possess nearest
neighbor character. Pausing time distributions in continuous time random walks
corresponding to the effective medium memories are calculated.Comment: 15 pages, 11 figure
Effects of disorder in location and size of fence barriers on molecular motion in cell membranes
The effect of disorder in the energetic heights and in the physical locations
of fence barriers encountered by transmembrane molecules such as proteins and
lipids in their motion in cell membranes is studied theoretically. The
investigation takes as its starting point a recent analysis of a periodic
system with constant distances between barriers and constant values of barrier
heights, and employs effective medium theory to treat the disorder. The
calculations make possible, in principle, the extraction of confinement
parameters such as mean compartment sizes and mean intercompartmental
transition rates from experimentally reported published observations. The
analysis should be helpful both as an unusual application of effective medium
theory and as an investigation of observed molecular movements in cell
membranes.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figure
Variational Considerations in the Study of Carrier Transport in Organic Crystals
A variational approach is used to investigate consequences of electron-phonon interactions between a charge carrier and multiple (specifically two) phonon branches. Phase diagrams are obtained and the nature of the transition from undressed to dressed phases of the carrier is studied with their help. No sharp transition between singly dressed and doubly dressed phases occurs. The effective carrier bandwidth, reduced by strong coupling to the high-frequency branch is found to be stable with respect to small to intermediate values of additional coupling to the low-frequency branch. This finding lends support to transport calculations based on the idea that carriers in a polaron band are dressed by one phonon mode and scattered by another
Static Pairwise Annihilation in Complex Networks
We study static annihilation on complex networks, in which pairs of connected
particles annihilate at a constant rate during time. Through a mean-field
formalism, we compute the temporal evolution of the distribution of surviving
sites with an arbitrary number of connections. This general formalism, which is
exact for disordered networks, is applied to Kronecker, Erd\"os-R\'enyi (i.e.
Poisson) and scale-free networks. We compare our theoretical results with
extensive numerical simulations obtaining excellent agreement. Although the
mean-field approach applies in an exact way neither to ordered lattices nor to
small-world networks, it qualitatively describes the annihilation dynamics in
such structures. Our results indicate that the higher the connectivity of a
given network element, the faster it annihilates. This fact has dramatic
consequences in scale-free networks, for which, once the ``hubs'' have been
annihilated, the network disintegrates and only isolated sites are left.Comment: 7 Figures, 10 page
Traversal Times for Random Walks on Small-World Networks
We study the mean traversal time for a class of random walks on Newman-Watts
small-world networks, in which steps around the edge of the network occur with
a transition rate F that is different from the rate f for steps across
small-world connections. When f >> F, the mean time to traverse the network
exhibits a transition associated with percolation of the random graph (i.e.,
small-world) part of the network, and a collapse of the data onto a universal
curve. This transition was not observed in earlier studies in which equal
transition rates were assumed for all allowed steps. We develop a simple
self-consistent effective medium theory and show that it gives a quantitatively
correct description of the traversal time in all parameter regimes except the
immediate neighborhood of the transition, as is characteristic of most
effective medium theories.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figure
Equilibration, generalized equipartition, and diffusion in dynamical Lorentz gases
We prove approach to thermal equilibrium for the fully Hamiltonian dynamics
of a dynamical Lorentz gas, by which we mean an ensemble of particles moving
through a -dimensional array of fixed soft scatterers that each possess an
internal harmonic or anharmonic degree of freedom to which moving particles
locally couple. We establish that the momentum distribution of the moving
particles approaches a Maxwell-Boltzmann distribution at a certain temperature
, provided that they are initially fast and the scatterers are in a
sufficiently energetic but otherwise arbitrary stationary state of their free
dynamics--they need not be in a state of thermal equilibrium. The temperature
to which the particles equilibrate obeys a generalized equipartition
relation, in which the associated thermal energy is equal to
an appropriately defined average of the scatterers' kinetic energy. In the
equilibrated state, particle motion is diffusive
Adiabatic-Nonadiabatic Transition in the Diffusive Hamiltonian Dynamics of a Classical Holstein Polaron
We study the Hamiltonian dynamics of a free particle injected onto a chain
containing a periodic array of harmonic oscillators in thermal equilibrium. The
particle interacts locally with each oscillator, with an interaction that is
linear in the oscillator coordinate and independent of the particle's position
when it is within a finite interaction range. At long times the particle
exhibits diffusive motion, with an ensemble averaged mean-squared displacement
that is linear in time. The diffusion constant at high temperatures follows a
power law D ~ T^{5/2} for all parameter values studied. At low temperatures
particle motion changes to a hopping process in which the particle is bound for
considerable periods of time to a single oscillator before it is able to escape
and explore the rest of the chain. A different power law, D ~ T^{3/4}, emerges
in this limit. A thermal distribution of particles exhibits thermally activated
diffusion at low temperatures as a result of classically self-trapped polaronic
states.Comment: 15 pages, 4 figures Submitted to Physical Review
Home-based rehabilitation: Physiotherapy student and client perspectives
Background. Home-based rehabilitation (HBR) in under-resourced areas in a primary healthcare (PHC) context exposes students to the real-life situations of their clients. There is a scarcity of literature on student and client experiences of HBR in the physiotherapy context. Increased knowledge of HBR could result in an enhanced experience for both student and client. This study sought to discover the perceptions of final-year physiotherapy students and their clients relating to their experiences of HBR during a PHC placement in a resource-constrained setting.Objectives. To explore the experiences and perceptions of physiotherapy students and their clients regarding HBR as part of clinical training in resource-constrained settings. To discover the barriers to and facilitators of effective HBR.Methods. An exploratory case study was performed. A qualitative phenomenologicalresearch design in the interpretivist paradigm was used. Semistructured interviews were conducted with clients (n=7) living in an under-resourced setting, who had received HBR from physiotherapy students. Paired interviews were conducted with final-year physiotherapy students (n=6) after their HBR placement.Results. Clients appreciated the students’ services; however, data revealed communication barriers and unmet expectations. Students reported struggling to adapt to the context, resulting in interventions not being sufficiently client-centred. They voiced a need for language competency and earlier exposure to such contexts.Conclusion. Exposure to real-life situations in under-resourced settings in HBR provides valuable situated and authentic learning opportunities for physiotherapy students. The experience can be useful in preparing graduates to address the needs of the populations they serve during community service
Essential Role of Correlations in Governing Charge Transport in Disordered Organic Materials
The transport of photoinjected charges in disordered organic films is often interpreted using a formula based on a Gaussian disorder model (GDM) that neglects spatial correlations due to charge-dipole interactions, even though such correlations have recently been shown to explain the universal electric field dependence observed in these systems. Based on extensive computer simulations of a 3D disorder model that includes such correlations, we present a new formula for analyzing experiments that accurately describes transport in these materials
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