Avalanche prediction in Self-organized systems
Abstract
It is a common belief that power-law distributed avalanches are inherently unpredictable. This idea affects phenomena as diverse as evolution, earthquakes, superconducting vortices, stock markets, etc; from atomic to social scales. It mainly comes from the concept of ``Self-organized criticality" (SOC), where criticality is interpreted in the way that at any moment, any small avalanche can eventually cascade into a large event. Nevertheless, this work demonstrates experimentally the possibility of avalanche prediction in the classical paradigm of SOC: a sandpile. By knowing the position of every grain in a two-dimensional pile, avalanches of moving grains follow a distinct power-law distribution. Large avalanches, although uncorrelated, are preceded by continuous, detectable variations in the internal structure of the pile that are monitored in order to achieve prediction.
Cite
@article{arxiv.0808.0623,
title = {Avalanche prediction in Self-organized systems},
author = {O. Ramos and E. Altshuler and K. J. Maloy},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0808.0623},
year = {2009}
}
Comments
4 pages, 4 figures, submitted to PRL