375 research outputs found
Cellular Automata
Modelling and simulation are disciplines of major importance for science and engineering. There is no science without models, and simulation has nowadays become a very useful tool, sometimes unavoidable, for development of both science and engineering. The main attractive feature of cellular automata is that, in spite of their conceptual simplicity which allows an easiness of implementation for computer simulation, as a detailed and complete mathematical analysis in principle, they are able to exhibit a wide variety of amazingly complex behaviour. This feature of cellular automata has attracted the researchers' attention from a wide variety of divergent fields of the exact disciplines of science and engineering, but also of the social sciences, and sometimes beyond. The collective complex behaviour of numerous systems, which emerge from the interaction of a multitude of simple individuals, is being conveniently modelled and simulated with cellular automata for very different purposes. In this book, a number of innovative applications of cellular automata models in the fields of Quantum Computing, Materials Science, Cryptography and Coding, and Robotics and Image Processing are presented
Nonequilibrium Critical Phenomena and Phase Transitions into Absorbing States
This review addresses recent developments in nonequilibrium statistical
physics. Focusing on phase transitions from fluctuating phases into absorbing
states, the universality class of directed percolation is investigated in
detail. The survey gives a general introduction to various lattice models of
directed percolation and studies their scaling properties, field-theoretic
aspects, numerical techniques, as well as possible experimental realizations.
In addition, several examples of absorbing-state transitions which do not
belong to the directed percolation universality class will be discussed. As a
closely related technique, we investigate the concept of damage spreading. It
is shown that this technique is ambiguous to some extent, making it impossible
to define chaotic and regular phases in stochastic nonequilibrium systems.
Finally, we discuss various classes of depinning transitions in models for
interface growth which are related to phase transitions into absorbing states.Comment: Review article, revised version, LaTeX, 153 pages, 63 encapsulated
postscript figure
- …