USQ: University of Southern Queensland

Normal form transforms separate slow and fast modes in stochastic dynamical systems

Roberts, A. J. (2008) Normal form transforms separate slow and fast modes in stochastic dynamical systems. Physica A: Statistical Mechanics and Its Applications, 387 (1). pp. 12-38. ISSN 0378-4371

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Official URL: http://www.elsevier.com/wps/find/journaldescription.cws_home/505702/description#description

Identification Number or DOI: 10.1016/j.physa.2007.08.023

Abstract

[Abstract]: Modelling stochastic systems has many important applications. Normal form coordinate transforms are a powerful way to untangle interesting long term macroscale dynamics from insignificant detailed microscale dynamics. We explore such coordinate transforms of stochastic differential systems when the dynamics has both slow modes and quickly decaying modes. The thrust is to derive normal forms useful for macroscopic modelling of complex stochastic microscopic systems. Thus we not only must reduce the dimensionality of the dynamics, but also endeavour to separate \emph{all} slow processes from \emph{all} fast time processes, both deterministic and stochastic. Quadratic stochastic effects in the fast modes contribute to the drift of the important slow modes. Some examples demonstrate that the coordinate transform may be only locally valid or may be globally valid depending upon the dynamical system. The results will help us accurately model, interpret and simulate multiscale stochastic systems.

Item Type:Article (DEST Category C)
Additional Information:Deposited in accordance with the copyright policy of the publisher.
Uncontrolled Keywords:stochastic dynamical systems; multiscale modelling
Subjects:230000 Mathematical Sciences > 230200 Statistics > 230202 Stochastic Analysis and Modelling
230000 Mathematical Sciences > 230100 Mathematics > 230113 Dynamical Systems
230000 Mathematical Sciences > 230100 Mathematics > 230107 Differential, Difference and Integral Equations
ID Code:3496
Deposited By:Prof Tony Roberts
Deposited On:14 Dec 2007 15:14
Last Modified:03 Mar 2008 09:34

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