57 research outputs found
Recurrent frequency-size distribution of characteristic events
Many complex systems, including sand-pile models, slider-block models, and
earthquakes, have been discussed whether they obey the principles of
self-organized criticality. Behavior of these systems can be investigated from
two different points of view: interoccurrent behavior in a region and recurrent
behavior at a given point on a fault or at a given fault. The interoccurrent
frequency-size statistics are known to be scale-invariant and obey the
power-law Gutenberg-Richter distribution. This paper investigates the recurrent
frequency-size behavior of characteristic events at a given point on a fault or
at a given fault. For this purpose sequences of creep events at a creeping
section of the San Andreas fault are investigated. The applicability of the
Brownian passage-time, lognormal, and Weibull distributions to the recurrent
frequency-size statistics of slip events is tested and the Weibull distribution
is found to be a best-fit distribution. To verify this result the behaviors of
the numerical slider-block and sand-pile models are investigated and the
applicability of the Weibull distribution is confirmed. Exponents of the
best-fit Weibull distributions for the observed creep event sequences and for
the slider-block model are found to have close values from 1.6 to 2.2 with the
corresponding aperiodicities of the applied distribution from 0.47 to 0.64.Comment: Minor correction
Applicability and non-applicability of equilibrium statistical mechanics to non-thermal damage phenomena: II. Spinodal behavior
This paper investigates the spinodal behavior of non-thermal damage
phenomena. As an example, a non-thermal fiber-bundle model with the global
uniform (meanfield) load sharing is considered. In the vicinity of the spinodal
point the power-law scaling behavior is found. For the meanfield fiber-bundle
model the spinodal exponents are found to have typical meanfield values.Comment: Version related: More careful explanation for the critical
slowing-down. General: The topological properties of non-thermal damage are
described by the formalism of statistical mechanics. This is the continuation
of arXiv:0805.0346. Comments, especially negative, are very welcom
Statistical mechanics of damage phenomena
This paper applies the formalism of classical, Gibbs-Boltzmann statistical
mechanics to the phenomenon of non-thermal damage. As an example, a non-thermal
fiber-bundle model with the global uniform (meanfield) load sharing is
considered. Stochastic topological behavior in the system is described in terms
of an effective temperature parameter thermalizing the system. An equation of
state and a topological analog of the energy-balance equation are obtained. The
formalism of the free energy potential is developed, and the nature of the
first order phase transition and spinodal is demonstrated.Comment: Critical point appeared to be a spinodal poin
- …