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Normal and Anomalous Diffusion: A Tutorial
TL;DR: In this article, the main concepts behind normal and anomalous diffusion are introduced, and a series of mathematical modeling tools are introduced and the relation between them is made clear, and the importance of probability distributions of the Levy type is explained.
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Abstract: The purpose of this tutorial is to introduce the main concepts behind normal and anomalous diffusion. Starting from simple, but well known experiments, a series of mathematical modeling tools are introduced, and the relation between them is made clear. First, we show how Brownian motion can be understood in terms of a simple random walk model. Normal diffusion is then treated (i) through formal izing the random walk model and deriving a classical diffusion equation, (ii) by using Fick’s law that leads again to the same diffusion equation, and (iii) by using a stochastic differential equation for the particle dynamics (the Langevin equa tion), which allows to determine the mean square displacement of particles. (iv) We discuss normal diffusion from the point of view of probability theory, applying the Central Limit Theorem to the random walk problem, and (v) we introduce the more general FokkerPlanck equation for diffusion that includes also advection. We turn then to anomalous diffusion, discussing first its formal characteristics, and proceeding to Continuous Time Random Walk (CTRW) as a model for anomalous diffusion. It is shown how CTRW can be treated formally, the importance of prob ability distributions of the Levy type is explained, and we discuss the relation of CTRW to fractional diffusion equations and show how the latter can be derived from the CTRW equations. Last, we demonstrate how a general diffusion equation can be derived for Hamiltonian systems, and we conclude this tutorial with a few recent applications of the above theories in laboratory and astrophysical plasmas.
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Stochastic processes in physics and chemistry
N.G. van Kampen,William P. Reinhardt +1 more
- 01 Jan 1981
TL;DR: In this article, the authors introduce the Fokker-planck equation, the Langevin approach, and the diffusion type of the master equation, as well as the statistics of jump events.
Transport theory: Microscopic reversibility and symmetry
K. Molvig,K. Hizanidis +1 more
TL;DR: In this article, the general theory of Fokker-planck equation symmetries and their relation to derived transport theory symmetry is developed, and the theory is compared to the different formulation given by Onsager.
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