Rare events play a crucial role in our society and a great effort has been dedicated to numerically study them in different contexts. This thesis proposes a numerical methodology based on Monte Carlo Metropolis-Hastings algorithm to efficiently sample rare events in chaotic systems. It starts by reviewing the relevance of rare events in chaotic systems, focusing in two types of rare events: states in closed systems with rare chaoticities, characterised by a finite-time Lyapunov exponent on a tail of its distribution, and states in transiently chaotic systems, characterised by a escape time on the tail of its distribution.
This thesis argues that these two problems can be interpreted as a traditional problem of statistical physics: sampling exponentially rare states in the phase-space - states in the tail of the density of states - with an increasing parameter - the system size. This is used as the starting point to review Metropolis-Hastings algorithm, a traditional and flexible methodology of importance sampling in statistical physics. By an analytical argument, it is shown that the chaoticity of the system hinders direct application of Metropolis-Hastings techniques to efficiently sample these states because the acceptance is low. It is argued that a crucial step to overcome low acceptance rate is to construct a proposal distribution that uses information about the system to bound the acceptance rate. Using generic properties of chaotic systems, such as exponential divergence of initial conditions and fractals embedded in their phase-spaces, a proposal distribution that guarantees a bounded acceptance rate is derived for each type of rare events. This proposal is numerically tested in simple chaotic systems, and the efficiency of the resulting algorithm is measured in numerous examples in both types of rare events.
The results confirm the dramatic improvement of using Monte Carlo importance sampling with the derived proposals against traditional methodologies:
the number of samples required to sample an exponentially rare state increases polynomially, as opposed to an exponential increase observed in uniform sampling. This thesis then analyses the sub-optimal (polynomial) efficiency of this algorithm in a simple system and shows analytically how the correlations induced by the proposal distribution can be detrimental to the efficiency of the algorithm. This thesis also analyses the effect of high-dimensional chaos in the proposal distribution and concludes that an anisotropic proposal that takes advantage of the different rates of expansion along the different unstable directions, is able to efficiently find rare states.
The applicability of this methodology is also discussed to sample rare states in non-hyperbolic systems, with focus on three systems: the logistic map, the Pomeau-Manneville map, and the standard map. Here, it is argued that the different origins of non-hyperbolicity require different proposal distributions. Overall, the results show that by incorporating specific information about the system in the proposal distribution of Metropolis-Hastings algorithm, it is possible to efficiently find and sample rare events of chaotic systems. This improved methodology should be useful to a large class of problems where the numerical characterisation of rare events is important.
Identifer | oai:union.ndltd.org:DRESDEN/oai:qucosa.de:bsz:14-qucosa-209014 |
Date | 30 August 2016 |
Creators | Leitão, Jorge C. |
Contributors | Technische Universität Dresden, Fakultät Mathematik und Naturwissenschaften, Prof. Dr. Holger Kantz, Prof. Dr. Holger Kantz, Prof. Dr. Roland Ketzmerick, Prof. Dr. Tamás Tél |
Publisher | Saechsische Landesbibliothek- Staats- und Universitaetsbibliothek Dresden |
Source Sets | Hochschulschriftenserver (HSSS) der SLUB Dresden |
Language | English |
Detected Language | English |
Type | doc-type:doctoralThesis |
Format | application/pdf |
Page generated in 0.0014 seconds