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Exploiting powerful techniques from physics and mathematics, this
book studies animal movement in ecology, with a focus on epidemic
spread. Pulmonary syndrome is not only feared in epidemics of
recent times, such as COVID-19, but is also characteristic of
epidemics studied earlier such as Hantavirus. The Hantavirus is one
of the book's central topics. Correlations between epidemic
outbreaks and precipitation events like El Nino are analyzed and
spatial reservoirs of infection in off-period of the epidemic,
known as refugia, are studied. Predicted traveling waves of
infection are successfully compared to field observations.
Territoriality in scent-marking animals is presented, with
parallels drawn with the theory of melting. The flocking and
herding of birds and mammals are described in terms of collective
excitations. For scientists interested in movement ecology and
epidemic spread, this book provides effective solutions to
long-standing problems.
This book provides a graduate-level introduction to three powerful
and closely related techniques in condensed matter physics: memory
functions, projection operators, and the defect technique. Memory
functions appear in the formalism of the generalized master
equations that express the time evolution of probabilities via
equations non-local in time, projection operators allow the
extraction of parts of quantities, such as the diagonal parts of
density matrices in statistical mechanics, and the defect technique
allows solution of transport equations in which the translational
invariance is broken in small regions, such as when crystals are
doped with impurities. These three methods combined form an
immensely useful toolkit for investigations in such disparate areas
of physics as excitation in molecular crystals, sensitized
luminescence, charge transport, non-equilibrium statistical
physics, vibrational relaxation, granular materials, NMR, and even
theoretical ecology. This book explains the three techniques and
their interrelated nature, along with plenty of illustrative
examples. Graduate students beginning to embark on a research
project in condensed matter physics will find this book to be a
most fruitful source of theoretical training.
This book presents an in-depth study of the discrete nonlinear
Schroedinger equation (DNLSE), with particular emphasis on
spatially small systems that permit analytic solutions. In many
quantum systems of contemporary interest, the DNLSE arises as a
result of approximate descriptions despite the fundamental
linearity of quantum mechanics. Such scenarios, exemplified by
polaron physics and Bose-Einstein condensation, provide application
areas for the theoretical tools developed in this text. The book
begins with an introduction of the DNLSE illustrated with the
dimer, development of fundamental analytic tools such as elliptic
functions, and the resulting insights into experiment that they
allow. Subsequently, the interplay of the initial quantum phase
with nonlinearity is studied, leading to novel phenomena with
observable implications in fields such as fluorescence
depolarization of stick dimers, followed by analysis of more
complex and/or larger systems. Specific examples analyzed in the
book include the nondegenerate nonlinear dimer, nonlinear trapping,
rotational polarons, and the nonadiabatic nonlinear dimer.
Phenomena treated include strong carrier-phonon interactions and
Bose-Einstein condensation. This book is aimed at researchers and
advanced graduate students, with chapter summaries and problems to
test the reader's understanding, along with an extensive
bibliography. The book will be essential reading for researchers in
condensed matter and low-temperature atomic physics, as well as any
scientist who wants fascinating insights into the role of
nonlinearity in quantum physics.
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