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Nonequilibrium dynamical transition in the asymmetric exclusion processProeme, Arno January 2011 (has links)
Over the last few decades the interests of statistical physicists have broadened to include the detailed quantitative study of many systems - chemical, biological and even social - that were not traditionally part of the discipline. These systems can feature rich and complex spatiotemporal behaviour, often due to continued interaction with the environment and characterised by the dissipation of flows of energy and/or mass. This has led to vigorous research aimed at extending the established theoretical framework and adapting analytical methods that originate in the study of systems at thermodynamic equilibrium to deal with out-of-equilibrium situations, which are much more prevalent in nature. This thesis focuses on a microscopic model known as the asymmetric exclusion process, or ASEP, which describes the stochastic motion of particles on a one-dimensional lattice. Though in the first instance a model of a lattice gas, it is sufficiently general to have served as the basis to model a wide variety of phenomena. That, as well as substantial progress made in analysing its stationary behaviour, including the locations and nature of phase transitions, have led to it becoming a paradigmatic model of an exactly solvable nonequilibrium system. Recently an exact solution for the dynamics found a somewhat enigmatic transition, which has not been well understood. This thesis is an attempt to verify and better understand the nature of that dynamical transition, including its relation, if any, to the static phase transitions. I begin in Chapter 2 by reviewing known results for the ASEP, in particular the totally asymmetric variant (TASEP), driven at the boundaries. I present the exact dynamical transition as it was first derived, and a reduced description of the dynamics known as domain wall theory (DWT), which locates the transition at a different place. In Chapter 3, I investigate solutions of a nonlinear PDE that constitutes a mean-field, continuum approximation of the ASEP, namely the Burgers equation, and find that a similar dynamical transition occurs there at the same place as predicted by DWT but in disagreement with the exact result. Next, in Chapter 4 I report on efforts to observe and measure the dynamical transition through Monte Carlo simulation. No directly obvious physical manifestation of the transition was observed. The relaxation of three different observables was measured and found to agree well with each other but only slightly better with the exact transition than with DWT. In Chapter 5 I apply a numerical renormalisation scheme known as the Density Matrix Renormalisation Group (DMRG) method and find that it confirms the exact dynamical transition, ruling out the behaviour predicted by DWT. Finally in Chapter 6 I demonstrate that a perturbative calculation, involving the crossing of eigenvalues, allows us to rederive the location of the dynamical transition found exactly, thereby offering some insight into the nature of the transition.
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Emergent phenomena and fluctuations in cooperative systemsGabel, Alan 22 January 2016 (has links)
We explore the role of cooperativity and large deviations on a set of fundamental non-equilibrium many-body systems.
In the cooperative asymmetric exclusion process, particles hop to the right at a constant rate only when the right neighboring site is vacant and hop at a faster rate when the left neighbor is occupied. In this model, a host of new heterogeneous density profile evolutions arise, including inverted shock waves and continuous compression waves. Cooperativity also drives the growth of complex networks via preferential attachment, where well-connected nodes are more likely to attract future connections. We introduce the mechanism of hindered redirection and show that it leads to network evolution by sublinear preferential attachment. We further show that no local growth rule can recreate superlinear preferential attachment. We also introduce enhanced redirection and show that the rule leads to networks with three unusual properties: (i) many macrohubs -- nodes whose degree is a finite fraction of the number of nodes in the network, (ii) a non-extensive degree distribution, and (iii) large fluctuations between different realizations of the growth process.
We next examine large deviations in the diffusive capture model, where N diffusing predators initially all located at L 'chase' a diffusing prey initially at x<L. The prey survives if it reaches a haven at the origin without meeting any predator. We reduce the stochastic movement of the many predators to a deterministic trajectory of a single effective predator. Using optimized Monte Carlo techniques, we simulate up to 10^500 predators to confirm our analytic prediction that the prey survival probability S ~ N^-z^2, where z=x/L. Last, we quantify `survival of the scarcer' in two-species competition. In this model, individuals of two distinct species reproduce and engage in both intra-species and inter-species competition. Here a well-mixed population typically reaches a quasi steady state. We show that in this quasi-steady state the situation may arise where species A is less abundant than B but rare fluctuations make it more likely that species B first becomes extinct.
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Nonequilibrium statistical physics applied to biophysical cellular processesSugden, Kate E. P. January 2010 (has links)
The methods of statistical physics are increasingly being employed in a range of interdisciplinary areas. In particular, aspects of complex biological processes have been elucidated by bringing the problems down to the level of simple interactions studied in a statistical sense. In nonequilibrium statistical physics, a one dimensional lattice model known as the totally asymmetric simple exclusion processes (TASEP) has become prominent as a tool for modelling various cellular transport processes. Indeed the context in which the TASEP was first introduced (MacDonald et. al., 1968) was to model ribosome motion along mRNA during protein synthesis. In this work I study a variation of the TASEP in which particles hop along a one dimensional lattice which extends as they reach the end. We introduce this model to describe the unique growth dynamics of filamentous fungi, whereby a narrow fungal filament extends purely from its tip region while being supplied with growth materials from behind the tip. We find that the steady state behaviour of our model reflects that of the TASEP, however there is an additional phase where a dynamic shock is present in the system. I show through Monte Carlo simulation and theoretical analysis that the qualitative behaviour of this model can be predicted with a simple mean-field approximation, while the details of the phase behaviour are accurate only in a refined approximation which takes into account some correlations. I also discuss a further refined mean-field approximation and give a heuristic argument for our results. Next I present an extension of the model which allows the particles to interact with a second lattice, on which they diffuse in either direction. A first order meanfield continuum approximation suggests that the steady states of this system will exhibit some novel behaviour. Through Monte Carlo simulation I discuss the qualitative changes that arise due to the on-off dynamics. Finally I study a model for a second biological phenomenon: the length fluctuations of microtubules. The model describes stochastic polymerisation events at the tip of a microtubule. Using a mean-field theory, we find a transition between regimes where the microtubule grows on average, and where the length remains finite. For low rates of polymerisation and depolymerisation, the transition is in good agreement with Monte Carlo simulation.
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Large deviations for boundary driven exclusion processesGonzález Duhart Muñoz de Cote, Horacio January 2015 (has links)
We study the totally asymmetric exclusion process on the positive integers with a single particle source at the origin. Liggett (1975) has shown that the long term behaviour of this process has a phase transition: If the particle production rate at the source and the initial density are below certain critical values, the stationary measure is a product measure, otherwise the stationary measure is spatially correlated. Following the approach of Derrida et al. (1993) it was shown by Grosskinsky (2004) that these correlations can be described by means of a matrix product representation. In this thesis we derive a large deviation principle with explicit rate function for the particle density in a macroscopic box based on this representation. The novel and rigorous technique we develop for this problem combines spectral theoretical and combinatorial ideas and has the potential to be applicable to other models described by matrix products.
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Complex boundaries for the Totally Asymmetric Simple Exclusion processSonigo, Nicky 02 November 2011 (has links) (PDF)
The simple exclusion process is formally defined as follows : each particle performs a simple random walk on a set of sites and interacts with other particles by never moving on occupied sites. Despite its simplicity, this process has properties that are found in many more complex statistical mechanics models. It is the combination of the simplicity of the process and the importance of the observed phenomena that make it one of the reference models in out of equilibrium statistical mechanics. In this thesis, I'm interested in the case of the totally asymmetric exclusion process (particles jump only to the right) on N to study its behavior according to the mechanism of particle creation : particles are created at site 0 with arate depending on the current configuration. Once this mechanism is no longer a Poisson process, the associated exclusion process does not admit a product invariant measure. As a consequence, classical computation methods with theinfinitesimal generator are rarely successful. So I used mainly the methods of coupling and second class particles.In the first part of the thesis, I'm interested in the model introduced by Grosskinsky for which I get the following result : if the maximum rate of creation and the initial density of particles are smaller than 12 and if the creation mechanism is of integrable range, there is no phase transition which means that there is only one invariant measure. In the second part of the thesis, my goal was to construct a process with finite and non-integrable range that has a phase transition. For this, I was inspired by methods developed for the process of specification of Bramson and Kalikow.
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Comportamento hidrodinâmico para o processo de exclusão com taxa lenta no bordoBaldasso, Rangel January 2013 (has links)
Apresentamos o teorema de limite hidrodinâmico para o processo de exclusão simples simétrico com taxa lenta no bordo. Neste processo, partículas descrevem passeios aleatórios independentes no espaço {O, 1, , N}, respeitando a regra de exclusão (que afirma que duas partículas não ocupam o mesmo lugar ao mesmo instante). Paralelamente, partículas podem nascer ou morrer nos sítios O e N com taxas proporcionais a N-1 . Com o devido reescalonamento, a densidade de partículas converge para a solução fraca de urna equação diferencial parcial parabólica. Além disso, no primeiro capítulo, apresentamos seções sobre o Teorema de Prohorov, o espaço das funções càdlàg e a métrica de Skorohod definida nesse espaço. / We present the hydrodynamic limit theorem for the simple symmetric exclusion process with slow driven boundary. In this process, particles describe independent random walks in the space {O, 1, , N}, using the exclusion rule (which says that two particles do not occupy the same place at the same time). We also suppose that particles can be born or die on the sites O and N with rates proportional to N -1 . With the right rescaling procedure, the density of particles converges to the weak solution of a parabolic partial differential equation. In the first chapter, we present sections about Prohorov's Theorem, the càdlàg function space and Skorohod's metric defined in this space.
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Comportamento hidrodinâmico para o processo de exclusão com taxa lenta no bordoBaldasso, Rangel January 2013 (has links)
Apresentamos o teorema de limite hidrodinâmico para o processo de exclusão simples simétrico com taxa lenta no bordo. Neste processo, partículas descrevem passeios aleatórios independentes no espaço {O, 1, , N}, respeitando a regra de exclusão (que afirma que duas partículas não ocupam o mesmo lugar ao mesmo instante). Paralelamente, partículas podem nascer ou morrer nos sítios O e N com taxas proporcionais a N-1 . Com o devido reescalonamento, a densidade de partículas converge para a solução fraca de urna equação diferencial parcial parabólica. Além disso, no primeiro capítulo, apresentamos seções sobre o Teorema de Prohorov, o espaço das funções càdlàg e a métrica de Skorohod definida nesse espaço. / We present the hydrodynamic limit theorem for the simple symmetric exclusion process with slow driven boundary. In this process, particles describe independent random walks in the space {O, 1, , N}, using the exclusion rule (which says that two particles do not occupy the same place at the same time). We also suppose that particles can be born or die on the sites O and N with rates proportional to N -1 . With the right rescaling procedure, the density of particles converges to the weak solution of a parabolic partial differential equation. In the first chapter, we present sections about Prohorov's Theorem, the càdlàg function space and Skorohod's metric defined in this space.
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Complex boundaries for the Totally Asymmetric Simple Exclusion process / Mécanismes de bord complexes pour le processus d’exclusion simple totalement asymétriqueSonigo, Nicky 02 November 2011 (has links)
Le processus d’exclusion simple est défini formellement de la façon suivante : chaque particule effectue une marche aléatoire sur un ensemble de sites et interagit avec les autres particules en ne se déplaçant jamais sur un site occupé.Malgré sa simplicité, ce processus présente des propriétés que l’on retrouve dans beaucoup de modèles de mécanique statistique plus complexes. C’est la conjonction de la simplicité du processus et de l’intérêt des phénomènes observés quien fait l’un des modèles de référence en mécanique statistique hors équilibre. Dans cette thèse, je me suis intéressé au cas du processus d’exclusion totalement asymétrique (les particules sautent uniquement vers la droite) sur Nafin d’étudier son comportement en fonction du mécanisme de création de particules: on crée des particules au site 0 avec un taux dépendant de la configurationactuelle. Dès que ce mécanisme n’est plus un processus de Poisson, le processusd’exclusion associé n’admet plus de mesure invariante sous forme de produitce qui fait que les méthodes classiques de calcul sur le générateur infinitésimaln’aboutissent que rarement. Je me suis donc appuyé principalement sur les méthodesde couplage et de particules de deuxième classe.Dans la première partie de la thèse, je me suis intéressé au modèle introduitpar Grosskinsky pour lequel j’ai obtenu les résultats suivants : si le taux maximumde création et la densité initiale de particules sont plus petits que 12 et sile mécanisme de création est à portée intégrable, il n’y a pas de transition dephase c’est-à-dire qu’il n’y a qu’une seule mesure invariante.Dans la deuxième partie de la thèse, je me suis intéressé au problème inversedont le but est de construire un processus à portée finie mais non-intégrableayant une transition de phase. Pour cela, je me suis inspiré des méthodes développéespour le processus des spécifications de Bramson et Kalikow. / The simple exclusion process is formally defined as follows : each particle performs a simple random walk on a set of sites and interacts with other particles by never moving on occupied sites. Despite its simplicity, this process has properties that are found in many more complex statistical mechanics models. It is the combination of the simplicity of the process and the importance of the observed phenomena that make it one of the reference models in out of equilibrium statistical mechanics. In this thesis, I’m interested in the case of the totally asymmetric exclusion process (particles jump only to the right) on N to study its behavior according to the mechanism of particle creation : particles are created at site 0 with arate depending on the current configuration. Once this mechanism is no longer a Poisson process, the associated exclusion process does not admit a product invariant measure. As a consequence, classical computation methods with theinfinitesimal generator are rarely successful. So I used mainly the methods of coupling and second class particles.In the first part of the thesis, I’m interested in the model introduced by Grosskinsky for which I get the following result : if the maximum rate of creation and the initial density of particles are smaller than 12 and if the creation mechanism is of integrable range, there is no phase transition which means that there is only one invariant measure. In the second part of the thesis, my goal was to construct a process with finite and non-integrable range that has a phase transition. For this, I was inspired by methods developed for the process of specification of Bramson and Kalikow.
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Comportamento hidrodinâmico para o processo de exclusão com taxa lenta no bordoBaldasso, Rangel January 2013 (has links)
Apresentamos o teorema de limite hidrodinâmico para o processo de exclusão simples simétrico com taxa lenta no bordo. Neste processo, partículas descrevem passeios aleatórios independentes no espaço {O, 1, , N}, respeitando a regra de exclusão (que afirma que duas partículas não ocupam o mesmo lugar ao mesmo instante). Paralelamente, partículas podem nascer ou morrer nos sítios O e N com taxas proporcionais a N-1 . Com o devido reescalonamento, a densidade de partículas converge para a solução fraca de urna equação diferencial parcial parabólica. Além disso, no primeiro capítulo, apresentamos seções sobre o Teorema de Prohorov, o espaço das funções càdlàg e a métrica de Skorohod definida nesse espaço. / We present the hydrodynamic limit theorem for the simple symmetric exclusion process with slow driven boundary. In this process, particles describe independent random walks in the space {O, 1, , N}, using the exclusion rule (which says that two particles do not occupy the same place at the same time). We also suppose that particles can be born or die on the sites O and N with rates proportional to N -1 . With the right rescaling procedure, the density of particles converges to the weak solution of a parabolic partial differential equation. In the first chapter, we present sections about Prohorov's Theorem, the càdlàg function space and Skorohod's metric defined in this space.
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Random Matrix Theory for Stochastic and Quantum Many-Body SystemsNakerst, Goran 20 September 2024 (has links)
Random matrix theory (RMT) is a mathematical framework that has found profound applications in physics, particularly in the study of many-body systems. Its success lies in its ability to predict universal statistical properties of complex systems, independent of the specific details. This thesis explores the application of RMT to two classes of many-body systems: quantum and stochastic many-body systems.
Within the quantum framework, this work focuses on the Bose-Hubbard system, which is paradigmatic for modeling ultracold atoms in optical traps. According to RMT and the Eigenstate Thermalization Hypothesis (ETH), eigenstate-to-eigenstate fluctuations of expectation values of local observables decay rapidly with the system size in the thermodynamic limit at sufficiently large temperatures. Here, we study these fluctuations in the classical limit of fixed lattice size and increasing boson number. We find that the fluctuations follow the RMT prediction for large system sizes but deviate substantially for small lattices. Partly motivated by these results, the Bose-Hubbard model on three sites is studied in more detail. On few sites, the Bose-Hubbard model is known to be a mixed system, being neither fully chaotic nor integrable. We compare energy-resolved classical and quantum measures of chaos, which show a strong agreement. Deviations from RMT predictions are attributed to the mixed nature of the few-site model.
In the context of stochastic systems, generators of Markov processes are studied. The focus is on the spectrum. We present results from two investigations of Markov spectra. First, we investigate the effect of sparsity on the spectrum of random generators. Dense random matrices previously used as a model for generic generators led to very large spectral gaps and therefore to unphysically short relaxation times. In this work, a model of random generators with adjustable sparsity — number of zero matrix elements — is presented, extending the dense framework. It is shown that sparsity leads to longer, more physically realistic relaxation times. Second, the generator spectrum of the Asymmetric Simple Exclusion Process (ASEP), a quintessential model in non-equilibrium statistical mechanics, is analyzed. We investigate the spectral boundary, which is characterized by pronounced spikes. The emergence of these spikes is analyzed from several points of view, including RMT.
The results presented in this thesis contribute to the understanding of the applicability of RMT to many-body systems. This thesis highlights successes such as the explanation of “ETH fluctuations” in Bose-Hubbard models, the improvement of random matrix descriptions by introducing sparsity, and the emergence of spikes in the spectral boundary of the ASEP. The latter is a notable case where RMT provides insights even though the ASEP is a Bethe-integrable system. Furthermore, this thesis shows examples of the limits of RMT, exemplified by the results presented for the Bose-Hubbard model with a few sites.
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