1,042 research outputs found
Phase Transition in a Three-States Reaction-Diffusion System
A one-dimensional reaction-diffusion model consisting of two species of
particles and vacancies on a ring is introduced. The number of particles in one
species is conserved while in the other species it can fluctuate because of
creation and annihilation of particles. It has been shown that the model
undergoes a continuous phase transition from a phase where the currents of
different species of particles are equal to another phase in which they are
different. The total density of particles and also their currents in each phase
are calculated exactly.Comment: 6 page
Matrix Product Eigenstates for One-Dimensional Stochastic Models and Quantum Spin Chains
We show that all zero energy eigenstates of an arbitrary --state quantum
spin chain Hamiltonian with nearest neighbor interaction in the bulk and single
site boundary terms, which can also describe the dynamics of stochastic models,
can be written as matrix product states. This means that the weights in these
states can be expressed as expectation values in a Fock representation of an
algebra generated by operators fulfilling quadratic relations which
are defined by the Hamiltonian.Comment: 11 pages, Late
Nonequilibrium critical behavior of a species coexistence model
A biologically motivated model for spatio-temporal coexistence of two
competing species is studied by mean-field theory and numerical simulations. In
d>1 dimensions the phase diagram displays an extended region where both species
coexist, bounded by two second-order phase transition lines belonging to the
directed percolation universality class. The two transition lines meet in a
multicritical point, where a non-trivial critical behavior is observed.Comment: 11 page
On Matrix Product Ground States for Reaction-Diffusion Models
We discuss a new mechanism leading to a matrix product form for the
stationary state of one-dimensional stochastic models. The corresponding
algebra is quadratic and involves four different matrices. For the example of a
coagulation-decoagulation model explicit four-dimensional representations are
given and exact expressions for various physical quantities are recovered. We
also find the general structure of -point correlation functions at the phase
transition.Comment: LaTeX source, 7 pages, no figure
The asymmetric exclusion model with sequential update
We present a solution for the stationary state of an asymmetric exclusion
model with sequential update and open boundary conditions. We solve the model
exactly for random hopping in both directions by applying a matrix-product
formalism which was recently used to solve the model with sublattice-parallel
update[1]. It is shown that the matrix-algebra describing the sequential update
and sublattice-parallel update are identical and can be mapped onto the random
sequential case treated by Derrida et al[2].Comment: 7 pages, Late
Matrix Product Ground States for Asymmetric Exclusion Processes with Parallel Dynamics
We show in the example of a one-dimensional asymmetric exclusion process that
stationary states of models with parallel dynamics may be written in a matrix
product form. The corresponding algebra is quadratic and involves three
different matrices. Using this formalism we prove previous conjectures for the
equal-time correlation functions of the model.Comment: LaTeX, 8 pages, one postscript figur
Universality properties of the stationary states in the one-dimensional coagulation-diffusion model with external particle input
We investigate with the help of analytical and numerical methods the reaction
A+A->A on a one-dimensional lattice opened at one end and with an input of
particles at the other end. We show that if the diffusion rates to the left and
to the right are equal, for large x, the particle concentration c(x) behaves
like As/x (x measures the distance to the input end). If the diffusion rate in
the direction pointing away from the source is larger than the one
corresponding to the opposite direction the particle concentration behaves like
Aa/sqrt(x). The constants As and Aa are independent of the input and the two
coagulation rates. The universality of Aa comes as a surprise since in the
asymmetric case the system has a massive spectrum.Comment: 27 pages, LaTeX, including three postscript figures, to appear in J.
Stat. Phy
Non-Markovian barrier crossing with two-time-scale memory is dominated by the faster memory component
We investigate non-Markovian barrier-crossing kinetics of a massive particle in one dimension in the presence of a memory function that is the sum of two exponentials with different memory times τ 1 and τ 2 . Our Langevin simulations for the special case where both exponentials contribute equally to the total friction show that the barrier crossing time becomes independent of the longer memory time if at least one of the two memory times is larger than the intrinsic diffusion time. When we associate memory effects with coupled degrees of freedom that are orthogonal to a one-dimensional reaction coordinate, this counterintuitive result shows that the faster orthogonal degrees of freedom dominate barrier-crossing kinetics in the non-Markovian limit and that the slower orthogonal degrees become negligible, quite contrary to the standard time-scale separation assumption and with important consequences for the proper setup of coarse-graining procedures in the non-Markovian case. By asymptotic matching and symmetry arguments, we construct a crossover formula for the barrier crossing time that is valid for general multi-exponential memory kernels. This formula can be used to estimate barrier-crossing times for general memory functions for high friction, i.e. in the overdamped regime, as well as for low friction, i.e. in the inertial regime. Typical examples where our results are important include protein folding in the high-friction limit and chemical reactions such as proton-transfer reactions in the low-friction limit
In an Ising model with spin-exchange dynamics damage always spreads
We investigate the spreading of damage in Ising models with Kawasaki
spin-exchange dynamics which conserves the magnetization. We first modify a
recent master equation approach to account for dynamic rules involving more
than a single site. We then derive an effective-field theory for damage
spreading in Ising models with Kawasaki spin-exchange dynamics and solve it for
a two-dimensional model on a honeycomb lattice. In contrast to the cases of
Glauber or heat-bath dynamics, we find that the damage always spreads and never
heals. In the long-time limit the average Hamming distance approaches that of
two uncorrelated systems. These results are verified by Monte-Carlo
simulations.Comment: 5 pages REVTeX, 4 EPS figures, final version as publishe
Differences between regular and random order of updates in damage spreading simulations
We investigate the spreading of damage in the three-dimensional Ising model
by means of large-scale Monte-Carlo simulations. Within the Glauber dynamics we
use different rules for the order in which the sites are updated. We find that
the stationary damage values and the spreading temperature are different for
different update order. In particular, random update order leads to larger
damage and a lower spreading temperature than regular order. Consequently,
damage spreading in the Ising model is non-universal not only with respect to
different update algorithms (e.g. Glauber vs. heat-bath dynamics) as already
known, but even with respect to the order of sites.Comment: final version as published, 4 pages REVTeX, 2 eps figures include
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