Anomalous Fluctuations of Extremes in Many-Particle Diffusion
ORAL
Abstract
Over one hundred years ago Einstein created a remarkably simple and powerful theory describing the behavior of a single diffusing particle. That theory has since been applied countless times to successfully model widely disparate systems. However, this theory neglects the effects a shared environment has on the particles. As a consequence, the Einstein theory dramatically fails to predict the behavior of extreme diffusion, i.e. outlier particles which have moved the farthest from their starting points. We study particles undergoing a random walk in a beta distributed environment and provide theoretical predictions, which we confirm numerically, of the behavior of the maximally displaced particle. By introducing a shared environment, we find three scaling regimes relating to the KPZ equation for the variance of the maximally displaced particle, contrary to the Einstein diffusion model which predicts a single scaling regime. Understanding the behavior of outliers will have wide ranging applicability to physical, biological, epidemiological, economic, and social systems where outliers often determine behavior.
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Presenters
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Jacob Hass
University of Oregon
Authors
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Jacob Hass
University of Oregon
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Eric I Corwin
University of Oregon
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Ivan Corwin
Columbia University
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Aileen Carroll-Godfrey
University of Oregon