Title of article
Fractional motions
Author/Authors
Eliazar، نويسنده , , Iddo I. and Shlesinger، نويسنده , , Michael F.، نويسنده ,
Pages
29
From page
101
To page
129
Abstract
Brownian motion is the archetypal model for random transport processes in science and engineering. Brownian motion displays neither wild fluctuations (the “Noah effect”), nor long-range correlations (the “Joseph effect”). The quintessential model for processes displaying the Noah effect is Lévy motion, the quintessential model for processes displaying the Joseph effect is fractional Brownian motion, and the prototypical model for processes displaying both the Noah and Joseph effects is fractional Lévy motion. In this paper we review these four random-motion models–henceforth termed “fractional motions” –via a unified physical setting that is based on Langevin’s equation, the Einstein–Smoluchowski paradigm, and stochastic scaling limits. The unified setting explains the universal macroscopic emergence of fractional motions, and predicts–according to microscopic-level details–which of the four fractional motions will emerge on the macroscopic level. The statistical properties of fractional motions are classified and parametrized by two exponents—a “Noah exponent” governing their fluctuations, and a “Joseph exponent” governing their dispersions and correlations. This self-contained review provides a concise and cohesive introduction to fractional motions.
Keywords
Joseph effect , Long- , Super-diffusion , Brownian motion , Fractional Brownian motion , Random walks , Lévy motion , Universality , Noah effect , Noah exponent , Fractional Lévy motion , Joseph exponent , scaling limits , Langevin’s equation , Short-range correlations , Sub-diffusion
Journal title
Astroparticle Physics
Record number
2004333
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