6,984 research outputs found
Global Diffusion in a Realistic Three-Dimensional Time-Dependent Nonturbulent Fluid Flow
We introduce and study the first model of an experimentally realizable
three-dimensional time-dependent nonturbulent fluid flow to display the
phenomenon of global diffusion of passive-scalar particles at arbitrarily small
values of the nonintegrable perturbation. This type of chaotic advection,
termed {\it resonance-induced diffusion\/}, is generic for a large class of
flows.Comment: 4 pages, uuencoded compressed postscript file, to appear in Phys.
Rev. Lett. Also available on the WWW from http://formentor.uib.es/~julyan/,
or on paper by reques
Dynamics of Elastic Excitable Media
The Burridge-Knopoff model of earthquake faults with viscous friction is
equivalent to a van der Pol-FitzHugh-Nagumo model for excitable media with
elastic coupling. The lubricated creep-slip friction law we use in the
Burridge-Knopoff model describes the frictional sliding dynamics of a range of
real materials. Low-dimensional structures including synchronized oscillations
and propagating fronts are dominant, in agreement with the results of
laboratory friction experiments. Here we explore the dynamics of fronts in
elastic excitable media.Comment: Int. J. Bifurcation and Chaos, to appear (1999
Information-theoretic significance of the Wigner distribution
A coarse grained Wigner distribution p_{W}(x,u) obeying positivity derives
out of information-theoretic considerations. Let p(x,u) be the unknown joint
PDF (probability density function) on position- and momentum fluctuations x,u
for a pure state particle. Suppose that the phase part Psi(x,z) of its Fourier
transform F.T.[p(x,u)]=|Z(x,z)|exp[iPsi(x,z)] is constructed as a hologram.
(Such a hologram is often used in heterodyne interferometry.) Consider a
particle randomly illuminating this phase hologram. Let its two position
coordinates be measured. Require that the measurements contain an extreme
amount of Fisher information about true position, through variation of the
phase function Psi(x,z). The extremum solution gives an output PDF p(x,u) that
is the convolution of the Wigner p_{W}(x,u) with an instrument function
defining uncertainty in either position x or momentum u. The convolution arises
naturally out of the approach, and is one-dimensional, in comparison with the
two-dimensional convolutions usually proposed for coarse graining purposes. The
output obeys positivity, as required of a PDF, if the one-dimensional
instrument function is sufficiently wide. The result holds for a large class of
systems: those whose amplitudes a(x) are the same at their boundaries
(Examples: states a(x) with positive parity; with periodic boundary conditions;
free particle trapped in a box).Comment: pdf version has 16 pages. No figures. Accepted for publ. in PR
Robust Magnetic Polarons in Type-II (Zn,Mn)Te Quantum Dots
We present evidence of magnetic ordering in type-II (Zn, Mn) Te quantum dots.
This ordering is attributed to the formation of bound magnetic polarons caused
by the exchange interaction between the strongly localized holes and Mn within
the dots. In our photoluminescence studies, the magnetic polarons are detected
at temperatures up to ~ 200 K, with a binding energy of ~ 40 meV. In addition,
these dots display an unusually small Zeeman shift with applied field (2 meV at
10 T). This behavior is explained by a small and weakly temperature-dependent
magnetic susceptibility due to anti-ferromagnetic coupling of the Mn spins
Nonlinear Dynamics of the Perceived Pitch of Complex Sounds
We apply results from nonlinear dynamics to an old problem in acoustical
physics: the mechanism of the perception of the pitch of sounds, especially the
sounds known as complex tones that are important for music and speech
intelligibility
An Arbitrary Curvilinear Coordinate Method for Particle-In-Cell Modeling
A new approach to the kinetic simulation of plasmas in complex geometries,
based on the Particle-in- Cell (PIC) simulation method, is explored. In the two
dimensional (2d) electrostatic version of our method, called the Arbitrary
Curvilinear Coordinate PIC (ACC-PIC) method, all essential PIC operations are
carried out in 2d on a uniform grid on the unit square logical domain, and
mapped to a nonuniform boundary-fitted grid on the physical domain. As the
resulting logical grid equations of motion are not separable, we have developed
an extension of the semi-implicit Modified Leapfrog (ML) integration technique
to preserve the symplectic nature of the logical grid particle mover. A
generalized, curvilinear coordinate formulation of Poisson's equations to solve
for the electrostatic fields on the uniform logical grid is also developed. By
our formulation, we compute the plasma charge density on the logical grid based
on the particles' positions on the logical domain. That is, the plasma
particles are weighted to the uniform logical grid and the self-consistent mean
electrostatic fields obtained from the solution of the logical grid Poisson
equation are interpolated to the particle positions on the logical grid. This
process eliminates the complexity associated with the weighting and
interpolation processes on the nonuniform physical grid and allows us to run
the PIC method on arbitrary boundary-fitted meshes.Comment: Submitted to Computational Science & Discovery December 201
Causation, Measurement Relevance and No-conspiracy in EPR
In this paper I assess the adequacy of no-conspiracy conditions employed in
the usual derivations of the Bell inequality in the context of EPR
correlations. First, I look at the EPR correlations from a purely
phenomenological point of view and claim that common cause explanations of
these cannot be ruled out. I argue that an appropriate common cause explanation
requires that no-conspiracy conditions are re-interpreted as mere common
cause-measurement independence conditions. In the right circumstances then,
violations of measurement independence need not entail any kind of conspiracy
(nor backwards in time causation). To the contrary, if measurement operations
in the EPR context are taken to be causally relevant in a specific way to the
experiment outcomes, their explicit causal role provides the grounds for a
common cause explanation of the corresponding correlations.Comment: 20 pages, 1 figur
Investing in Prevention or Paying for Recovery - Attitudes to Cyber Risk
The file attached to this record is the author's final peer reviewed version. The Publisher's final version can be found by following the DOI link.Broadly speaking an individual can invest time and effort to avoid becoming victim to a cyber attack and/or they can invest resource in recovering from any attack. We introduce a new game called the pre-vention and recovery game to study this trade-off. We report results from the experimental lab that allow us to categorize different approaches to risk taking. We show that many individuals appear relatively risk loving in that they invest in recovery rather than prevention. We find little difference in behavior between a gain and loss framing
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