| Publication Type | pre-print |
| School or College | College of Mines & Earth Sciences |
| Department | Atmospheric Sciences |
| Creator | Garrett, Timothy J. |
| Title | Modes of growth in dynamic systems |
| Date | 2012-01-01 |
| Description | Regardless of a system's complexity or scale, its growth can be considered to be a spontaneous thermodynamic response to a local convergence of down-gradient material flows. Here it is shown how system growth can be constrained to a few distinct modes that depend on the time integral of past flows and the current availability of material and energetic resources. These modes include a law of diminishing returns, logistic behavior and, if resources are expanding very rapidly, super-exponential growth. For a case where a system has a resolved sink as well as a source, growth and decay can be characterized in terms of a slightly modified form of the predator-prey equations commonly employed in ecology, where the perturbation formulation of these equations is equivalent to a damped simple harmonic oscillator. Thus, the framework presented here suggests a common theoretical under-pinning for emergent behaviors in the physical and life sciences. Specific examples are described for phenomena as seemingly dissimilar as the development of rain and the evolution of fish stocks. |
| Type | Text |
| Publisher | Royal Society Publishing |
| Volume | 468 |
| Issue | 2145 |
| First Page | 1 |
| Last Page | 17 |
| Language | eng |
| Bibliographic Citation | Garrett, T. J. (2012). Modes of growth in dynamic systems. Proceedings of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences, 468(2145), 1-17. |
| Rights Management | ©Royal Society |
| Format Medium | application/pdf |
| Format Extent | 310,695 bytes |
| Identifier | uspace,17740 |
| ARK | ark:/87278/s6nw2tbj |
| Setname | ir_uspace |
| ID | 712557 |
| Reference URL | https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6nw2tbj |