1. Non-Debye relaxations: Smeared time evolution, memory effects, and the Laplace exponents.
- Author
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Górska, K., Horzela, A., and Pogány, T.K.
- Subjects
- *
RELAXATION phenomena , *FRACTIONAL calculus , *STOCHASTIC processes , *DIELECTRIC relaxation , *DISTRIBUTION (Probability theory) - Abstract
• Methods of generalized fractional calculus merged with the stochastic processes approach opens possibility to link memory functions with completely Bernstein functions determined from the stochastic processes underlying the relaxation phenomena. • We show how our approach works for Havriliak-Negami and Jurlewicz-Weron-Stanislavsky models. The non-Debye, i.e., non-exponential, behavior characterizes a large plethora of dielectric relaxation phenomena. Attempts to find their theoretical explanation are dominated either by considerations rooted in the stochastic processes methodology or by the so-called fractional dynamics based on equations involving fractional derivatives which mimic the non-local time evolution and as such may be interpreted as describing memory effects. Using the recent results coming from the stochastic approach we link memory functions with the Laplace (characteristic) exponents of infinitely divisible probability distributions and show how to relate the latter with experimentally measurable spectral functions characterizing relaxation in the frequency domain. This enables us to incorporate phenomenological knowledge into the evolution laws. To illustrate our approach we consider the standard Havriliak-Negami and Jurlewicz-Weron-Stanislavsky models for which we derive well-defined evolution equations. Merging stochastic and fractional dynamics approaches sheds also new light on the analysis of relaxation phenomena which description needs going beyond using the single evolution pattern. We determine sufficient conditions under which such description is consistent with general requirements of our approach. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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