The delayed uncoupled continuous-time random walks do not provide a model for the telegraph equation

From MaRDI portal
Publication:6231330

DOI10.1103/PHYSREVE.85.021150arXiv1202.6468WikidataQ51391444 ScholiaQ51391444MaRDI QIDQ6231330FDOQ6231330


Authors: Sergey A. Rukolaine, A. M. Samsonov Edit this on Wikidata


Publication date: 29 February 2012

Abstract: It has been alleged in several papers that the so called delayed continuous-time random walks (DCTRWs) provide a model for the one-dimensional telegraph equation at microscopic level. This conclusion, being widespread now, is strange, since the telegraph equation describes phenomena with finite propagation speed, while the velocity of the motion of particles in the DCTRWs is infinite. In this paper we investigate how accurate are the approximations to the DCTRWs provided by the telegraph equation. We show that the diffusion equation, being the correct limit of the DCTRWs, gives better approximations in L2 norm to the DCTRWs than the telegraph equation. We conclude therefore that, first, the DCTRWs do not provide any correct microscopic interpretation of the one-dimensional telegraph equation, and second, the kinetic (exact) model of the telegraph equation is different from the model based on the DCTRWs.













This page was built for publication: The delayed uncoupled continuous-time random walks do not provide a model for the telegraph equation

Report a bug (only for logged in users!)Click here to report a bug for this page (MaRDI item Q6231330)