1,883 research outputs found

    ``Weather'' Records: Musings on Cold Days after a Long Hot Indian Summer

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    We present a simple, pedagogical introduction to the statistics of extreme values. Motivated by a string of record high temperatures in December 1998, we consider the distribution, averages and lifetimes for a simplified model of such ``records.'' Our ``data'' are sequences of independent random numbers all of which are generated from the same probability distribution. A remarkable universality emerges: a number of results, including the lifetime histogram, are universal, that is, independent of the underlying distribution.Comment: 14 pages, 3 figures. Invited paper for American Journal of Physic

    Network Evolution Induced by the Dynamical Rules of Two Populations

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    We study the dynamical properties of a finite dynamical network composed of two interacting populations, namely; extrovert (aa) and introvert (bb). In our model, each group is characterized by its size (NaN_a and NbN_b) and preferred degree (κa\kappa_a and κbκa\kappa_b\ll\kappa_a). The network dynamics is governed by the competing microscopic rules of each population that consist of the creation and destruction of links. Starting from an unconnected network, we give a detailed analysis of the mean field approach which is compared to Monte Carlo simulation data. The time evolution of the restricted degrees \moyenne{k_{bb}} and \moyenne{k_{ab}} presents three time regimes and a non monotonic behavior well captured by our theory. Surprisingly, when the population size are equal Na=NbN_a=N_b, the ratio of the restricted degree \theta_0=\moyenne{k_{ab}}/\moyenne{k_{bb}} appears to be an integer in the asymptotic limits of the three time regimes. For early times (defined by t<t1=κbt<t_1=\kappa_b) the total number of links presents a linear evolution, where the two populations are indistinguishable and where θ0=1\theta_0=1. Interestingly, in the intermediate time regime (defined for t1<t<t2κat_1<t<t_2\propto\kappa_a and for which θ0=5\theta_0=5), the system reaches a transient stationary state, where the number of contacts among introverts remains constant while the number of connections is increasing linearly in the extrovert population. Finally, due to the competing dynamics, the network presents a frustrated stationary state characterized by a ratio θ0=3\theta_0=3.Comment: 21 pages, 6 figure

    Convection cells induced by spontaneous symmetry breaking

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    Ubiquitous in nature, convection cells are a clear signature of systems out-of-equilibrium. Typically, they are driven by external forces, like gravity (in combination with temperature gradients) or shear. In this article, we show the existence of such cells in possibly the simplest system, one that involves only a temperature gradient. In particular, we consider an Ising lattice gas on a square lattice, in contact with two thermal reservoirs, one at infinite temperature and another at TT. When this system settles into a non-equilibrium stationary state, many interesting phenomena exist. One of these is the emergence of convection cells, driven by spontaneous symmetry breaking when TT is set below the critical temperature.Comment: published version, 2 figures, 5 page

    Energy flux near the junction of two Ising chains at different temperatures

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    We consider a system in a non-equilibrium steady state by joining two semi-infinite Ising chains coupled to thermal reservoirs with {\em different} temperatures, TT and TT^{\prime}. To compute the energy flux from the hot bath through our system into the cold bath, we exploit Glauber heat-bath dynamics to derive an exact equation for the two-spin correlations, which we solve for T=T^{\prime}=\infty and arbitrary TT. We find that, in the T=T'=\infty sector, the in-flux occurs only at the first spin. In the T<T<\infty sector (sites x=1,2,...x=1,2,...), the out-flux shows a non-trivial profile: F(x)F(x). Far from the junction of the two chains, F(x)F(x) decays as ex/ξe^{-x/\xi}, where ξ\xi is twice the correlation length of the {\em equilibrium} Ising chain. As T0T\rightarrow 0, this decay crosses over to a power law (x3x^{-3}) and resembles a "critical" system. Simulations affirm our analytic results.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, submitted to EP

    Factorised Steady States in Mass Transport Models on an Arbitrary Graph

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    We study a general mass transport model on an arbitrary graph consisting of LL nodes each carrying a continuous mass. The graph also has a set of directed links between pairs of nodes through which a stochastic portion of mass, chosen from a site-dependent distribution, is transported between the nodes at each time step. The dynamics conserves the total mass and the system eventually reaches a steady state. This general model includes as special cases various previously studied models such as the Zero-range process and the Asymmetric random average process. We derive a general condition on the stochastic mass transport rules, valid for arbitrary graph and for both parallel and random sequential dynamics, that is sufficient to guarantee that the steady state is factorisable. We demonstrate how this condition can be achieved in several examples. We show that our generalized result contains as a special case the recent results derived by Greenblatt and Lebowitz for dd-dimensional hypercubic lattices with random sequential dynamics.Comment: 17 pages 1 figur
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