Abstract
Abstract
We study a method for detecting the origins of anomalous diffusion, when it is observed in an ensemble of times-series, generated experimentally or numerically, without having knowledge about the exact underlying dynamics. The reasons for anomalous diffusive scaling of the mean-squared displacement are decomposed into three root causes: increment correlations are expressed by the ‘Joseph effect’ (Mandelbrot and Wallis 1968 Water Resour. Res.
4 909), fat-tails of the increment probability density lead to a ‘Noah effect’ (Mandelbrot and Wallis 1968 Water Resour. Res.
4 909), and non-stationarity, to the ‘Moses effect’ (Chen et al 2017 Phys. Rev. E
95 042141). After appropriate rescaling, based on the quantification of these effects, the increment distribution converges at increasing times to a time-invariant asymptotic shape. For different processes, this asymptotic limit can be an equilibrium state, an infinite-invariant, or an infinite-covariant density. We use numerical methods of time-series analysis to quantify the three effects in a model of a non-linearly coupled Lévy walk, compare our results to theoretical predictions, and discuss the generality of the method.
Funder
US National Science Foundation
Subject
General Physics and Astronomy
Cited by
17 articles.
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