Anomalous diffusion and the Moses effect in an aging deterministic model

ORAL

Abstract

We show that the anomalous diffusive behavior found in an aging system can be decomposed into three fundamental constitutive causes. A model process that is a sum of increments that are iterates of a chaotic dynamical system, the Pomeau-Manneville map, is examined. The increments can have long-time correlations, fat-tailed distributions and be non-stationary. Each of these properties can cause anomalous diffusion through what is known as the Joseph, Noah and Moses effects, respectively. The model can have either sub- or super-diffusive behavior, which we find is generally due to the combination of the three effects. Scaling exponents quantifying each of the three constitutive effects are calculated using analytic methods and confirmed with numerical simulations. They are then related to the scaling of the distribution of the process through a scaling relation. The work also discusses the importance of Moses effect in the anomalous diffusion of experimental systems.

*Work supported by the NSF through grant DMR-1507371 and AAUW (International Fellowship).

Presenters

  • Vidushi Adlakha

    • Department of Physics, University of Houston

Authors

  • Vidushi Adlakha

    • Department of Physics, University of Houston
  • Philipp G. Meyer

    • Max Planck Institute for the Physics of Complex Systems
  • Holger Kantz

    • Max Planck Institute for the Physics of Complex Systems
  • Kevin E Bassler

    • Department of Physics, University of Houston
    • Physics, University of Houston