98 resultados para Leadership Processes
Resumo:
We study steady-state correlation functions of nonlinear stochastic processes driven by external colored noise. We present a methodology that provides explicit expressions of correlation functions approximating simultaneously short- and long-time regimes. The non-Markov nature is reduced to an effective Markovian formulation, and the nonlinearities are treated systematically by means of double expansions in high and low frequencies. We also derive some exact expressions for the coefficients of these expansions for arbitrary noise by means of a generalization of projection-operator techniques.
Resumo:
First-passage time statistics for non-Markovian processes have heretofore only been developed for processes driven by dichotomous fluctuations that are themselves Markov. Herein we develop a new method applicable to Markov and non-Markovian dichotomous fluctuations and calculate analytic mean first-passage times for particular examples.
Resumo:
We develop a method to obtain first-passage-time statistics for non-Markovian processes driven by dichotomous fluctuations. The fluctuations themselves need not be Markovian. We calculate analytic first-passage-time distributions and mean first-passage times for exponential, rectangular, and long-tail temporal distributions of the fluctuations.
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Our previously developed stochastic trajectory analysis technique has been applied to the calculation of first-passage time statistics of bound processes. Explicit results are obtained for linearly bound processes driven by dichotomous fluctuations having exponential and rectangular temporal distributions.
Resumo:
The stochastic-trajectory-analysis technique is applied to the calculation of the mean¿first-passage-time statistics for processes driven by external shot noise. Explicit analytical expressions are obtained for free and bound processes.
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A new method for the calculation of first-passage times for non-Markovian processes is presented. In addition to the general formalism, some familiar examples are worked out in detail.
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We present a new model of sequential adsorption in which the adsorbing particles experience dipolar interactions. We show that in the presence of these long-range interactions, highly ordered structures in the adsorbed layer may be induced at low temperatures. The new phenomenology is manifest through significant variations of the pair correlation function and the jamming limit, with respect to the case of noninteracting particles. Our study could be relevant in understanding the adsorption of magnetic colloidal particles in the presence of a magnetic field.
Resumo:
We obtain the exact analytical expression, up to a quadrature, for the mean exit time, T(x,v), of a free inertial process driven by Gaussian white noise from a region (0,L) in space. We obtain a completely explicit expression for T(x,0) and discuss the dependence of T(x,v) as a function of the size L of the region. We develop a new method that may be used to solve other exit time problems.
Resumo:
We calculate noninteger moments ¿tq¿ of first passage time to trapping, at both ends of an interval (0,L), for some diffusion and dichotomous processes. We find the critical behavior of ¿tq¿, as a function of q, for free processes. We also show that the addition of a potential can destroy criticality.
Resumo:
The exact analytical expression for the Hausdorff dimension of free processes driven by Gaussian noise in n-dimensional space is obtained. The fractal dimension solely depends on the time behavior of the arbitrary correlation function of the noise, ranging from DX=1 for Orstein-Uhlenbeck input noise to any real number greater than 1 for fractional Brownian motions.
Resumo:
We study free second-order processes driven by dichotomous noise. We obtain an exact differential equation for the marginal density p(x,t) of the position. It is also found that both the velocity ¿(t) and the position X(t) are Gaussian random variables for large t.
Resumo:
We present exact equations and expressions for the first-passage-time statistics of dynamical systems that are a combination of a diffusion process and a random external force modeled as dichotomous Markov noise. We prove that the mean first passage time for this system does not show any resonantlike behavior.
Resumo:
We study the motion of an unbound particle under the influence of a random force modeled as Gaussian colored noise with an arbitrary correlation function. We derive exact equations for the joint and marginal probability density functions and find the associated solutions. We analyze in detail anomalous diffusion behaviors along with the fractal structure of the trajectories of the particle and explore possible connections between dynamical exponents of the variance and the fractal dimension of the trajectories.