Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published bySolomon Harrington Modified over 9 years ago
1
Rare Events and Phase Transition in Reaction–Diffusion Systems Vlad Elgart, Virginia Tech. Alex Kamenev, in collaboration with Cambridge, Dec. 2008 Michael Assaf, Jerusalem Baruch Meerson, Jerusalem
2
Reaction–Diffusion Models SIR: susceptible- infected-recovered Examples: Binary annihilation Dynamical rules Discreteness
3
Outline: Outline: Hamiltonian formulation Rare events calculus ( Freidlin-Wentzell (?) ) Phase transitions and their classification
4
Example: Branching-Annihilation Rate equation: Reaction rules: PDF: Extinction time
5
Master Equation Generating Function (GF): Multiply ME by and sum over : Normalization: extinction
6
Hamiltonian Imaginary time “Schrodinger” equation: Hamiltonian is normally ordered, but non-Hermitian
7
Hamiltonian For arbitrary reaction: Conservation of probability If no particles are created from the vacuum
8
Semiclassical (WKB) treatment Assuming: Hamilton-Jacoby equation (rare events !) Boundary conditions:Hamilton equations:
9
Branching-Annihilation Rate equation ! Long times: zero energy trajectories !
10
Extinction time Extinction time
11
Time Dependent Rates (e.g. a Catastrophe) Time Dependent Rates (e.g. a Catastrophe) Temporary drop in the reproduction rate p q 1 1 t A A B B
12
Susceptible (S) – Infected (I) model Susceptible (S) – Infected (I) model
13
Diffusion Diffusion “Quantum Mechanics” “QFT “ Equations of Motion:Rate Equation:
14
Refuge R Lifetime: Instanton solution
15
Phase Transitions Phase Transitions Thermodynamic limit Extinction time vs. diffusion time Hinrichsen 2000
16
Critical exponents Hinrichsen 2000
17
Critical Exponents (cont) Critical Exponents (cont) d=1 d=2 d=3 d 4 0.276 0.5840.811 1 1.734 1.2961.106 1 How to calculate critical exponents analytically? What other reactions belong to the same universality class? Are there other universality classes and how to classify them? > Hinrichsen 2000
18
Equilibrium Models Landau Free Energy: V Ising universality class: critical parameter (Lagrangian field theory) Critical dimension Renormalization group, -expansion
19
Reaction-diffusion models Reaction-diffusion models Hamiltonian field theory: p q 1 1 1 V critical parameter
20
Directed Percolation Directed Percolation Reggeon field theory Janssen 1981, Grassberger, Cardy 1982 Critical dimension Renormalization group, -expansion cf. in d=3 What are other universality classes (if any)?
21
k-particle processes `Triangular’ topology is stable! Effective Hamiltonian: k All reactions start from at least k particles Example: k = 2 Pair Contact Process with Diffusion (PCPD)
22
Reactions with additional symmetries Reactions with additional symmetries Parity conservation: Reversibility: Cardy, Tauber, 1995
23
First Order Transitions Example:
24
Wake up ! Wake up ! Hamiltonian formulation and and its semiclassical limit. Rare events as trajectories in the phase space Classification of the phase transitions according to the phase space topology
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.