1,722 research outputs found

    Non-equilibrium wetting transition in a magnetic Eden model

    Full text link
    Magnetic Eden clusters with ferromagnetic interaction between nearest-neighbor spins are grown in a confined 2d-geometry with short range magnetic fields acting on the surfaces. The change of the growing interface curvature driven by the field and the temperature is identified as a non-equilibrium wetting transition and the corresponding phase diagram is evaluated.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figure

    Far-from-equilibrium growth of thin films in a temperature gradient

    Full text link
    The irreversible growth of thin films under far-from-equilibrium conditions is studied in (2+1)−(2+1)-dimensional strip geometries. Across one of the transverse directions, a temperature gradient is applied by thermal baths at fixed temperatures between T1T_1 and T2T_2, where T1<Tchom<T2T_1<T_c^{hom}<T_2 and Tchom=0.69(1)T_c^{hom}=0.69(1) is the critical temperature of the system in contact with an homogeneous thermal bath. By using standard finite-size scaling methods, we characterized a continuous order-disorder phase transition driven by the thermal bath gradient with critical temperature Tc=0.84(2)T_c=0.84(2) and critical exponents ν=1.53(6)\nu=1.53(6), γ=2.54(11)\gamma=2.54(11), and β=0.26(8)\beta=0.26(8), which belong to a different universality class from that of films grown in an homogeneous bath. Furthermore, the effects of the temperature gradient are analyzed by means of a bond model that captures the growth dynamics. The interplay of geometry and thermal bath asymmetries leads to growth bond flux asymmetries and the onset of transverse ordering effects that explain qualitatively the shift in the critical temperature.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures. arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:1207.253

    Criticality and the Onset of Ordering in the Standard Vicsek Model

    Get PDF
    Experimental observations of animal collective behavior have shown stunning evidence for the emergence of large-scale cooperative phenomena resembling phase transitions in physical systems. Indeed, quantitative studies have found scale-free correlations and critical behavior consistent with the occurrence of continuous, second-order phase transitions. The Standard Vicsek Model (SVM), a minimal model of self-propelled particles in which their tendency to align with each other competes with perturbations controlled by a noise term, appears to capture the essential ingredients of critical flocking phenomena. In this paper, we review recent finite-size scaling and dynamical studies of the SVM, which present a full characterization of the continuous phase transition through dynamical and critical exponents. We also present a complex network analysis of SVM flocks and discuss the onset of ordering in connection with XY-like spin models.Comment: 15 pages, 4 figures. To appear in Interface Focu

    Complex Network Structure of Flocks in the Standard Vicsek Model

    Get PDF
    In flocking models, the collective motion of self-driven individuals leads to the formation of complex spatiotemporal patterns. The Standard Vicsek Model (SVM) considers individuals that tend to adopt the direction of movement of their neighbors under the influence of noise. By performing an extensive complex network characterization of the structure of SVM flocks, we show that flocks are highly clustered, assortative, and non-hierarchical networks with short-tailed degree distributions. Moreover, we also find that the SVM dynamics leads to the formation of complex structures with an effective dimension higher than that of the space where the actual displacements take place. Furthermore, we show that these structures are capable of sustaining mean-field-like orientationally ordered states when the displacements are suppressed, thus suggesting a linkage between the onset of order and the enhanced dimensionality of SVM flocks.Comment: 26 pages, 11 figures. To appear in J. Stat. Phy
    • …
    corecore