We study anomalous heat conduction and anomalous diffusion in low dimensional
systems ranging from nonlinear lattices, single walled carbon nanotubes, to
billiard gas channels. We find that in all discussed systems, the anomalous
heat conductivity can be connected with the anomalous diffusion, namely, if
energy diffusion is σ2(t)≡=2Dtα(0<α≤2), then the thermal conductivity can be expressed in terms of the system size
L as κ=cLβ with β=2−2/α. This result predicts that
a normal diffusion (α=1) implies a normal heat conduction obeying the
Fourier law (β=0), a superdiffusion (α>1) implies an anomalous
heat conduction with a divergent thermal conductivity (β>0), and more
interestingly, a subdiffusion (α<1) implies an anomalous heat
conduction with a convergent thermal conductivity (β<0), consequently,
the system is a thermal insulator in the thermodynamic limit. Existing
numerical data support our theoretical prediction.Comment: 15 Revtex pages, 16 figures. Invited article for CHAOS focus issue
commemorating the 50th anniversary of the Fermi-Pasta-Ulam (FPU) mode