The Physics of Wall Street: a brief History of Predicting the Unpredictable
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• 137 computer to solve the equations in real time, keeping one step ahead of the actual weather to make accurate predictions long into the future. few of his colleagues were persuaded. As a first step, and as an at- tempt to show his fellow meteorologists that he wasn’t crazy, Lorenz came up with a very simple model for wind. this model drew on the behavior of wind in the real world, but it was highly idealized, with twelve rules governing the way the wind would blow, and with no ac- counting for seasons, nightfall, or rain. Lorenz wrote a program using a primitive computer — a royal McBee, one of the very first computers designed to be placed on a desk and operated by a single user — that would solve his model’s equations and spit out a handful of numbers corresponding to the magnitude and direction of the prevailing winds as they changed over time. It wasn’t a predictive model of the weather; it was more like a toy climate that incorporated atmospheric phenom- ena. But it was enough to convince at least some of his colleagues that this was something worth pursuing. Graduate students and junior fac- ulty would come into his office daily to peer into Lorenz’s imaginary world, taking bets on whether the wind would turn north or south, strengthen or weaken, on a given day. At first, it seemed that Lorenz’s model was a neat proof of concept. It even had some (limited) predictive power: certain patterns seemed to emerge over and over again, with enough regularity that a work- ing meteorologist might be able to look for similar patterns in actual weather data. But the real discovery was an accident. one day, while reviewing his data, Lorenz decided he wanted to look at a stretch of weather more closely. He started the program, plugging in the val- ues for the wind that corresponded to the beginning of the period he was interested in. If things were working as they should, the com- puter would run the calculations and come up with the same results he had seen before. He set the computer to work and went off for the afternoon. When he returned a few hours later, it was obvious that something had gone wrong. the data on his screen looked nothing like the data he had seen the first time he had run the simulation with these same numbers. He checked the values he had entered — they were correct, exactly what had appeared on his printout. After poking around for a while, he concluded that the computer must be broken. It was only later that he realized what had really happened. the computer contained enough memory to store six digits at a time. the state of Lorenz’s mini world was summed up by a decimal with six fig- ures, something like .452386. But he had set up the program to record only three digits, to save space on the printouts and make them more readable. So instead of .452386 (say), the computer printout would read .452. When he set up the computer to rerun the simulation, he had started with the shorter, rounded number instead of the full six- digit number that had fully described the state of the system during the first run-through. this kind of rounding should not have mattered. Imagine you are trying to putt a golf ball. the hole you are aiming for is only slightly larger than the ball itself. And yet, if you miscalculate by a fraction of an inch, and you hit the ball a little too hard or a little too softly, or you aim a little to one side, you would still expect the ball to get close to the hole, even if it doesn’t go in. If you are throwing a baseball, you would expect it to get pretty close to the catcher even if your arm doesn’t extend exactly as you want it to, or even if your fingers slip slightly on the ball. this is how the physical world works: if two objects start in more or less the same physical state, they are going to do more or less the same thing and end up in very similar places. the world is an ordered place. or at least that’s what everyone thought before Lorenz accidentally discovered chaos. Lorenz didn’t call it chaos. that word came later, with the work of two physicists named James Yorke and tien-Yien Li who wrote a paper called “Period three Implies chaos.” Lorenz called his discov- ery “sensitive dependence on initial conditions,” which, though much less sexy, is extremely descriptive, capturing the essence of chaotic be- havior. despite the fact that Lorenz’s system was entirely determinis- tic, wholly governed by the laws of Lorenzian weather, extremely small differences in the state of the system at a given time would quickly explode into large differences later on. this observation, a result of one of the very first computer simulations in service of a scientific prob- 138 • t h e p h y s i c s o f wa l l s t r e e t |
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