Predictability of catastrophic events: Material rupture, earthquakes, turbulence, financial crashes, and human birth
- Institute of Geophysics and Planetary Physics and Department of Earth and Space Sciences, University of California, 595 Charles Young Drive East, Box 951567, Los Angeles, CA 90095-1567; and Laboratoire de Physique de la Matiére Condensée, Universite de Nice-Sophia Antipolis, Faculte des Sciences, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, Unité Mixte de Recherche 6622, 06108 Nice Cedex 2, France
Abstract
We propose that catastrophic events are “outliers” with statistically different properties than the rest of the population and result from mechanisms involving amplifying critical cascades. We describe a unifying approach for modeling and predicting these catastrophic events or “ruptures,” that is, sudden transitions from a quiescent state to a crisis. Such ruptures involve interactions between structures at many different scales. Applications and the potential for prediction are discussed in relation to the rupture of composite materials, great earthquakes, turbulence, and abrupt changes of weather regimes, financial crashes, and human parturition (birth). Future improvements will involve combining ideas and tools from statistical physics and artificial/computational intelligence, to identify and classify possible universal structures that occur at different scales, and to develop application-specific methodologies to use these structures for prediction of the “crises” known to arise in each application of interest. We live on a planet and in a society with intermittent dynamics rather than a state of equilibrium, and so there is a growing and urgent need to sensitize students and citizens to the importance and impacts of ruptures in their multiple forms.
Footnotes
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↵ † E-mail: sornette{at}ess.ucla.edu.
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This paper results from the Arthur M. Sackler Colloquium of the National Academy of Sciences, “Self-Organized Complexity in the Physical, Biological, and Social Sciences,” held March 23–24, 2001, at the Arnold and Mabel Beckman Center of the National Academies of Science and Engineering in Irvine, CA.
- Copyright © 2002, The National Academy of Sciences





