On the inherent self-excited macroscopic randomness of chaotic three-body system
Shijun Liao, Xiaoming Li

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that microscopic inherent uncertainties in initial conditions of a chaotic three-body system naturally amplify into macroscopic randomness over time, revealing self-excited unpredictability without external disturbances.
Contribution
The paper introduces the concept of self-excited macroscopic randomness, showing how micro-level uncertainties lead to macroscopic chaos and symmetry breaking in a three-body system without external forces.
Findings
Micro-level initial uncertainties grow exponentially into macroscopic randomness.
Approximately 25% chance of spontaneous symmetry breaking at t=1000.
Self-excited random disruptions occur without external disturbances.
Abstract
What is the origin of macroscopic randomness (uncertainty)? This is one of the most fundamental open questions for human being. In this paper, 10000 samples of reliable (convergent), multiple-scale (from 1.0E-60 to 100) numerical simulations of a chaotic three-body system indicate that, without any external disturbance, the microscopic inherent uncertainty (in the level of 1.0E-60) due to physical fluctuation of initial positions of the three-body system enlarges exponentially into macroscopic randomness (at the level O(1)) until t=T*, the so-called physical limit time of prediction, but propagates algebraically thereafter when accurate prediction of orbit is impossible. Note that these 10000 samples use micro-level, inherent physical fluctuations of initial position, which have nothing to do with human being. Especially, the differences of these 10000 fluctuations are mathematically so…
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