scholarly journals DISCUSSION OF AN ALTERNATIVE APPROACH TO DESCRIPTION OF TIME EVOLUTION IN THE NEUTRAL KAONS SYSTEM

1995 ◽  
Vol 10 (08) ◽  
pp. 1151-1168 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. URBANOWSKI

Long time properties of the effective Hamiltonian H||(t) governing the time evolution in a given subspace of the total state space of the system considered are discussed. The effects of the early time behavior of the eigenstates |lt=0> and |st=0> for H||(t) in the case of the subspace of neutral kaons (or other similar particles) are discussed, and suppositions as to how they should manifest themselves in experiments are made. The hypothesis that |lt=0> and |st=0> could be eigenstates for CP transformation is formulated and a method for its verification is proposed. Comparison is made of parameters characterizing the properties of the neutral kaons system obtained by the LOY method and by the method based on the use of the Hamiltonian H||(t).

1993 ◽  
Vol 08 (21) ◽  
pp. 3721-3745 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. URBANOWSKI

Approximate formulae are given for the effective Hamiltonian H||(t) governing the time evolution in a subspace ℋ|| of the state space ℋ. The properties of matrix elements of H||(t) and the eigenvalue problem for H||(t) are discussed in the case of two-dimensional ℋ||. The eigenvectors of H||(t) for the short time region are found to be different from those for the long time region. The decay law of particles described by the eigenvectors of H||(t) is shown to have the form of the exponential function multiplied by some time-independent factor, equal to 1 only in the case of the [Formula: see text]-invariant theory. Some general properties of the matrix elements of H||(t) are tested in the Lee model.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Satish Ramakrishna

Abstract The act of measurement on a quantum state is supposed to “decohere” and “collapse” the state into one of several eigenstates of the operator corresponding to the observable being measured. This measurement process is sometimes described as outside standard quantum-mechanical evolution and not calculable from Schr¨odinger’s equation [2]. Progress has, however, been made in studying this problem with two main calculation tools - one uses a time-independent Hamiltonian [18], while a rather more general approach proving that decoherence occurs under some generic conditions [21]. The two general approaches to the study of wave-function collapse are as follows. The first approach, called the “consistent” or “decoherent”’ histories approach [11], studies microscopic histories that diverge probabilistically and explains collapse as an event in our particular history. The other, referred to as the “environmental decoherence” approach[8, 21] studies the effect of the environment upon the quantum system, to explain wave-function decoherence. Then collapse is produced by irreversible effects of various sorts. In the “environmental decoherence” approach, one writes down a Markovian-approximated Master equation to study the time-evolution of the reduced density matrix and obtains the long-time dependence of the off-diagonal elements of this matrix. The calculation in this paper studies the evolution of a quantum system under the “environmental” approach, with a rather important analytic difference. We start from the Schr¨odinger equation for the state of the system, with a time-dependent Hamiltonian that reflects the actual microscopic interactions that are occurring. Then we systematically solve for the time-evolved state, without invoking a Markovian approximation when writing out the effective time-evolution equation, i.e., keeping the evolution unitary until the end. This approach is useful and it allows the system wave-function to explicitly “un-collapse” if the measurement apparatus is sufficiently small. However, in the limit of a macroscopic system, collapse is a temporary state that will simply take extremely long (of the order of multiple universe lifetimes) to reverse. While this has been attempted previously [12], we study a particularly simple and calculable example. We make some connections to the work by Linden et al [21] while doing so. The calculation in this paper has interesting implications for the interpretation of the Wigner’s friend experiment, as well as the Mott experiment, which is explored in Sections V and VI (especially the enumerated points in Section VI). The upshot is that as long as Wigner’s friend is macroscopically large (or uses a macroscopically large measuring instrument), no one needs to worry that Wigner would see something different from his friend. Indeed, Wigner’s friend does not even need to be conscious during the measurement that she conducts. In particular, as a result of the mathematical analysis, the short-time behavior of a collapsing system, at least the one considered in this paper, is not exponential. Instead, it is the usual Fermigolden rule result. The long-term behavior is, of course, still exponential. This is a second novel feature of the paper - we connect the short-term Fermi-golden rule (quadratic-in-time behavior) transition probability to the exponential long-time behavior of a collapsing wave-function in one continuous mathematical formulation.


2004 ◽  
Vol 19 (07) ◽  
pp. 481-496
Author(s):  
K. URBANOWSKI

We show that the real parts of diagonal matrix elements of the exact effective Hamiltonian governing the time evolution in the subspace of states of neutral kaons and similar particles cannot be equal for t>t0 (t0 is the instant of creation of the pair K0, [Formula: see text]) when the total system under consideration is CPT invariant but CP noninvariant. The unusual consequence of this result is that, contrary to the properties of stable particles, the masses of the unstable particle, e.g. K0, and its antiparticle, [Formula: see text], need not be equal for t≫t0 in the case of preserved CPT and violated CP symmetries.


2010 ◽  
Vol 42 (2) ◽  
pp. 371-391 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anna Rusinek

We examine the long-time behavior of forward rates in the framework of Heath-Jarrow-Morton-Musiela models with infinite-dimensional Lévy noise. We give an explicit condition under which the rates have a mean reversion property. In a special case we show that this condition is fulfilled for any Lévy process with variance smaller than a given constant, depending only on the state space and the volatility.


Author(s):  
Samuel Oladimeji Sowol ◽  
Abdullahi Adinoyi Ibrahim ◽  
Daouda Sangare ◽  
Ismaila Omeiza Ibrahim ◽  
Francis I. Johnson

In response to the global COVID-19 pandemic, this work aims to understand the early time evolution and the spread of the disease outbreak with a data driven approach. To this effect, we applied Susceptible- Infective-Recovered/Removed (SIR) epidemiological model on the disease. Additionally, we used the Machine Learning linear regression model on the historical COVID-19 data to predict the earlier stage of the disease. The evolution of the disease spread with the Mathematical SIR model and Machine Learning regression model for time series forecasting of the COVID-19 data without, and with lags and trends, was able to capture the early spread of the disease. Consequently, we suggest that if using a more advanced epidemiological model, and sophisticated machine learning regression models on the COVID-19 data, we can understand, as well as predict the long time evolution of the disease spread.


2010 ◽  
Vol 42 (02) ◽  
pp. 371-391 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anna Rusinek

We examine the long-time behavior of forward rates in the framework of Heath-Jarrow-Morton-Musiela models with infinite-dimensional Lévy noise. We give an explicit condition under which the rates have a mean reversion property. In a special case we show that this condition is fulfilled for any Lévy process with variance smaller than a given constant, depending only on the state space and the volatility.


2021 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 27-45
Author(s):  
M. M. Freitas ◽  
M. J. Dos Santos ◽  
A. J. A. Ramos ◽  
M. S. Vinhote ◽  
M. L. Santos

Abstract In this paper, we study the long-time behavior of a nonlinear coupled system of wave equations with damping terms and subjected to small perturbations of autonomous external forces. Using the recent approach by Chueshov and Lasiecka in [21], we prove that this dynamical system is quasi-stable by establishing a quasistability estimate, as consequence, the existence of global and exponential attractors is proved. Finally, we investigate the upper and lower semicontinuity of global attractors under autonomous perturbations.


2020 ◽  
Vol 2020 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiaopeng Zhao

AbstractIn this paper, we study the long time behavior of solution for the initial-boundary value problem of convective Cahn–Hilliard equation in a 2D case. We show that the equation has a global attractor in $H^{4}(\Omega )$ H 4 ( Ω ) when the initial value belongs to $H^{1}(\Omega )$ H 1 ( Ω ) .


2021 ◽  
pp. 1-27
Author(s):  
Ahmad Makki ◽  
Alain Miranville ◽  
Madalina Petcu

In this article, we are interested in the study of the well-posedness as well as of the long time behavior, in terms of finite-dimensional attractors, of a coupled Allen–Cahn/Cahn–Hilliard system associated with dynamic boundary conditions. In particular, we prove the existence of the global attractor with finite fractal dimension.


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