Noise-induced phase space transport in two-dimensional Hamiltonian systems

Ilya V. Pogorelov and Henry E. Kandrup
Phys. Rev. E 60, 1567 – Published 1 August 1999
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Abstract

First passage time experiments were used to explore the effects of low amplitude noise as a source of accelerated phase space diffusion in two-dimensional Hamiltonian systems, and these effects were then compared with the effects of periodic driving. The objective was to quantify and understand the manner in which “sticky” chaotic orbits that, in the absence of perturbations, are confined near regular islands for very long times, can become “unstuck” much more quickly when subjected to even very weak perturbations. For both noise and periodic driving, the typical escape time scales logarithmically with the amplitude of the perturbation. For white noise, the details seem unimportant: Additive and multiplicative noise typically have very similar effects, and the presence or absence of a friction related to the noise by a fluctuation-dissipation theorem is also largely irrelevant. Allowing for colored noise can significantly decrease the efficacy of the perturbation, but only when the autocorrelation time, which vanishes for white noise, becomes so large that there is little power at frequencies comparable to the natural frequencies of the unperturbed orbit. Similarly, periodic driving is relatively inefficient when the driving frequency is not comparable to these natural frequencies. This suggests that noise-induced extrinsic diffusion, like modulational diffusion associated with periodic driving, is a resonance phenomenon. The logarithmic dependence of the escape time on amplitude reflects the fact that the time required for perturbed and unperturbed orbits to diverge a given distance scales logarithmically in the amplitude of the perturbation.

  • Received 11 February 1999

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevE.60.1567

©1999 American Physical Society

Authors & Affiliations

Ilya V. Pogorelov*

  • Department of Physics, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida 32611

Henry E. Kandrup

  • Department of Astronomy, Department of Physics, and Institute for Fundamental Theory, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida 32611

  • *Electronic address: ilya@phys.ufl.edu
  • Electronic address: kandrup@astro.ufl.edu

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Vol. 60, Iss. 2 — August 1999

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