Evidence of dispersion relations for the nonlinear response of the Lorenz 63 system
From MaRDI portal
Publication:1016081
DOI10.1007/s10955-008-9675-zzbMath1162.82015arXiv0809.0101MaRDI QIDQ1016081
Publication date: 4 May 2009
Published in: Journal of Statistical Physics (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://arxiv.org/abs/0809.0101
Spectrum; Kramers-Kronig relations; sum rules; numerical simulation; Lorenz system; time series analysis; periodic forcing; harmonic generation; susceptibility; axiom A; climate; Ruelle response theory; non-equilibrium steady states; singular hyperbolic system
62M10: Time series, auto-correlation, regression, etc. in statistics (GARCH)
82B05: Classical equilibrium statistical mechanics (general)
82C05: Classical dynamic and nonequilibrium statistical mechanics (general)
Related Items
Multi-level dynamical systems: connecting the Ruelle response theory and the Mori-Zwanzig approach, Stochastic perturbations to dynamical systems: a response theory approach, On the recurrence and robust properties of Lorenz'63 model, Nambu representation of an extended Lorenz model with viscous heating
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Linear response, susceptibility and resonances in chaotic toy models
- Response theory for equilibrium and non-equilibrium statistical mechanics: Causality and generalized Kramers-Kronig relations
- On the susceptibility function of piecewise expanding interval maps
- Dynamical ensembles in stationary states.
- On differentiability of SRB states for partially hyperbolic systems
- Dynamics beyond uniform hyperbolicity. A global geometric and probabilistic perspective
- General linear response formula in statistical mechanics, and the fluctuation-dissipation theorem far from equilibrium
- Parametric smoothness and self-scaling of the statistical properties of a minimal climate model: what beyond the mean field theories?
- Causality and dispersion relations for fixed momentum transfer
- On the volume of singular-hyperbolic sets
- Singular-hyperbolic attractors are chaotic
- Singular hyperbolic systems
- Nonequilibrium statistical mechanics near equilibrium: computing higher-order terms