ترغب بنشر مسار تعليمي؟ اضغط هنا

Hierarchical organization of cities and nations

57   0   0.0 ( 0 )
 نشر من قبل Gianpietro Malescio
 تاريخ النشر 2000
  مجال البحث فيزياء
والبحث باللغة English




اسأل ChatGPT حول البحث

Universality in the behavior of complex systems often reveals itself in the form of scale-invariant distributions that are essentially independent of the details of the microscopic dynamics. A representative paradigm of complex behavior in nature is cooperative evolution. The interaction of individuals gives rise to a wide variety of collective phenomena that strongly differ from individual dynamics---such as demographic evolution, cultural and technological development, and economic activity. A striking example of such cooperative phenomena is the formation of urban aggregates which, in turn, can be considered to cooperate in giving rise to nations. We find that population and area distributions of nations follow an inverse power-law behavior, as is known for cities. The exponents, however, are radically different in the two cases ($mu approx 1$ for nations, $mu approx 2$ for cities). We interpret these findings by developing growth models for cities and for nations related to basic properties of partition of the plane. These models allow one to understand the empirical findings without resort to the introduction of complex socio-economic factors.



قيم البحث

اقرأ أيضاً

66 - R. Donangelo 1999
We study the dynamics of exchange value in a system composed of many interacting agents. The simple model we propose exhibits cooperative emergence and collapse of global value for individual goods. We demonstrate that the demand that drives the valu e exhibits non Gaussian fat tails and typical fluctuations which grow with time interval with a Hurst exponent of 0.7.
We examine the global organization of heterogeneous equilibrium networks consisting of a number of well distinguished interconnected parts--``communities or modules. We develop an analytical approach allowing us to obtain the statistics of connected components and an intervertex distance distribution in these modular networks, and to describe their global organization and structure. In particular, we study the evolution of the intervertex distance distribution with an increasing number of interlinks connecting two infinitely large uncorrelated networks. We demonstrate that even a relatively small number of shortcuts unite the networks into one. In more precise terms, if the number of the interlinks is any finite fraction of the total number of connections, then the intervertex distance distribution approaches a delta-function peaked form, and so the network is united.
346 - Daniel Hexner , Dov Levine 2014
A simple periodically driven system displaying rich behavior is introduced and studied. The system self-organizes into a mosaic of static ordered regions with three possible patterns, which are threaded by one-dimensional paths on which a small numbe r of mobile particles travel. These trajectories are self-avoiding and non-intersecting, and their relationship to self-avoiding random walks is explored. Near $rho=0.5$ the distribution of path lengths becomes power-law like up to some cutoff length, suggesting a possible critical state.
Experimental studies of cell motility in culture have shown that under adequate conditions these living organisms possess the ability to organize themselves into complex structures. Such structures may exhibit a synergy that greatly increases their s urvival rate and facilitate growth or spreading to different tissues. These properties are even more significant for cancer cells and related pathologies. Theoretical studies supported by experimental evidence have also shown that adhesion plays a significant role in cellular organization. Here we show that the directional persistence observed in polarized displacements permits the formation of stable cell aggregates in the absence of adhesion, even in low-density regimes. We introduce a discrete stochastic model for the dispersal of polarized cells with exclusion and derive the hydrodynamic limit. We demonstrate that the persistence coupled with the cell-cell exclusion hinders the cellular motility around other cells, leading to a non-linear diffusion which facilitates their capture into larger aggregates.
We study two-dimensional chaotic standard maps coupled along the edges of scale-free trees and tree-like subgraph (4-star) with a non-symplectic coupling and time delay between the nodes. Apart from the chaotic and regular 2-periodic motion, the coup led map system exhibits variety of dynamical effects in a wide range of coupling strengths. This includes dynamical localization, emergent periodicity, and appearance of strange non-chaotic attractors. Near the strange attractors we find long-range correlations in the intervals of return-times to specified parts of the phase space. We substantiate the analysis with the finite-time Lyapunov stability. We also give some quantitative evidence of how the small-scale dynamics at 4-star motifs participates in the genesis of the collective behavior at the whole network.
التعليقات
جاري جلب التعليقات جاري جلب التعليقات
mircosoft-partner

هل ترغب بارسال اشعارات عن اخر التحديثات في شمرا-اكاديميا