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1/ f Noise and multifractality from bristlecone pine growth explained by the statistical convergence of random data
Author(s) -
Wayne S. Kendal
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
proceedings of the royal society a mathematical physical and engineering sciences
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1471-2946
pISSN - 1364-5021
DOI - 10.1098/rspa.2016.0586
Subject(s) - statistical physics , self organized criticality , fractal , mathematics , poisson distribution , noise (video) , point process , gaussian , tree (set theory) , power law , gaussian noise , multifractal system , statistics , stable distribution , distribution (mathematics) , mathematical analysis , physics , criticality , computer science , algorithm , artificial intelligence , quantum mechanics , nuclear physics , image (mathematics)
Tree-ring growth records from bristlecone pines reveal an irregular pattern of fluctuations that have been linked to climatic change but otherwise have remained poorly understood. We find within these records evidence for a temporally related variance to mean power law, 1/f noise and multifractality that empirically resembles a fractal stochastic process and could be attributed to self-organized criticality. These growth records, however, also conformed to a non-Gaussian statistical distribution (the Tweedie compound Poisson distribution) characterized by an inherent variance to mean power law, that by itself implies 1/f noise. This distribution has a fundamental role in statistical theory as a focus of convergence for many types of random data, much like the Gaussian distribution has with the central limit theorem. The growth records were also multifractal, with the dimensional exponent of the Tweedie distribution critically balanced near the transition point between fractal stochastic processes and gamma distributed data, possibly consequent to a related convergence effect. Non-Gaussian random systems, like those related to bristlecone pine tree growth, may express 1/f noise and multifractality through mathematical convergence effects alone, without the dynamical assumptions of self-organized criticality.

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