In print, at least, what might seem arrogant comes across as a kind of innocent, childlike enthusiasm, a lack of concern for anything but the sheer joy of figuring things out. His ruthless simplifications of geology, evolution, and neurology pay off because, as Bak notes, his models describe behavio
How Nature Works: the science of self-organized criticality
β Scribed by Per Bak (auth.)
- Publisher
- Copernicus
- Year
- 1996
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 229
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
and acknowledgments Self-organized criticality is a new way of viewing nature. The basic picture is one where nature is perpetually out of balance, but organized in a poised state-the critical state-where anything can happen within well-defined statistical laws. The aim of the science of self-organized criticality is to yield insight into the fundamental question of why nature is complex, not simple, as the laws of physics imply. Self-organized criticality explains some ubiquitous patterns existing in nature that we view as complex. Fractal structure and catastrophic events are among those regularities. Applications range from the study of pulsars and black holes to earthquakes and the evolution of life. One intriguing conseΒ quence of the theory is that catastrophes can occur for no reason whatsoever. Mass extinctions may take place without any external triggering mechanism such as a volcanic eruption or a meteorite hitting the earth (although the theΒ ory of course cannot rule out that this has in fact occurred). xu How Nature Works Since we first proposed the idea in 1987, more than 2,ooo papers have been written on self-organized criticality, making ours the most cited paper in physics during that period. How Nature Works is the first book to deal with the subject. The basic idea is simple, and most of the mathematical models that have been used in the implementation of the theory are not complicated.
β¦ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages i-xiii
Complexity and Criticality....Pages 1-32
The Discovery of Self-Organized Criticality....Pages 33-48
The Sandpile Paradigm....Pages 49-64
Real Sandpiles and Landscape Formation....Pages 65-84
Earthquakes, Starquakes, and Solar Flares....Pages 85-104
The βGame of Lifeβ: Complexity is Criticality....Pages 105-112
Is Life a Self-Organized Critical Phenomenon?....Pages 113-127
Mass Extinctions and Punctuated Equilibria in a Simple Model of Evolution....Pages 129-159
Theory of the Punctuated Equilibrium Model....Pages 161-174
The Brain....Pages 175-182
On Economics and Traffic Jams....Pages 183-198
Back Matter....Pages 199-212
β¦ Subjects
Analysis; Statistical Physics, Dynamical Systems and Complexity; Simulation and Modeling; Math. Applications in Chemistry; Earth Sciences, general; Mathematical and Computational Biology
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
A professor of physics offers a stunning new theory of complex systems, from earthquakes to stock markets. This book, written by the discoverer of self-organized criticality, describes for general readers a concept that has become increasingly important in science. Many seemingly disparate aspects o
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