Kadanoff Sand Piles, following the snowball

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Publication:6238530

arXiv1301.0997MaRDI QIDQ6238530FDOQ6238530

Kévin Perrot, Eric Rémila

Publication date: 6 January 2013

Abstract: This paper is about cubic sand grains moving around on nicely packed columns in one dimension (the physical sand pile is two dimensional, but the support of sand columns is one dimensional). The Kadanoff Sand Pile Model is a discrete dynamical system describing the evolution of a finite number of stacked grains --as they would fall from an hourglass-- to a stable configuration. Grains move according to the repeated application of a simple local rule until reaching a stable configuration from which no rule can be applied, namely a fixed point. The main interest of the model relies in the difficulty of understanding its behavior, despite the simplicity of the rule. We are interested in describing the shape of fixed point configurations according to the number of initially stacked sand grains. In this paper, we prove the emergence of a wavy shape on fixed points, i.e., a regular pattern is (nearly) periodically repeated on fixed points. Interestingly, the regular pattern does not cover the entire fixed point, but eventually emerges from a seemingly highly disordered segment. Fortunately, the relative size of the part of fixed points non-covered by the pattern repetition is asymptotically null.













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