5,704 research outputs found
Exact Results for the One-Dimensional Self-Organized Critical Forest-Fire Model
We present the analytic solution of the self-organized critical (SOC)
forest-fire model in one dimension proving SOC in systems without conservation
laws by analytic means. Under the condition that the system is in the steady
state and very close to the critical point, we calculate the probability that a
string of neighboring sites is occupied by a given configuration of trees.
The critical exponent describing the size distribution of forest clusters is
exactly and does not change under certain changes of the model
rules. Computer simulations confirm the analytic results.Comment: 12 pages REVTEX, 2 figures upon request, dro/93/
Different hierarchy of avalanches observed in the Bak-Sneppen evolution model
We introduce a new quantity, average fitness, into the Bak-Sneppen evolution
model. Through the new quantity, a different hierarchy of avalanches is
observed. The gap equation, in terms of the average fitness, is presented to
describe the self-organization of the model. It is found that the critical
value of the average fitness can be exactly obtained. Based on the simulations,
two critical exponents, avalanche distribution and avalanche dimension, of the
new avalanches are given.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Conformal field theory correlations in the Abelian sandpile mode
We calculate all multipoint correlation functions of all local bond
modifications in the two-dimensional Abelian sandpile model, both at the
critical point, and in the model with dissipation. The set of local bond
modifications includes, as the most physically interesting case, all weakly
allowed cluster variables. The correlation functions show that all local bond
modifications have scaling dimension two, and can be written as linear
combinations of operators in the central charge -2 logarithmic conformal field
theory, in agreement with a form conjectured earlier by Mahieu and Ruelle in
Phys. Rev. E 64, 066130 (2001). We find closed form expressions for the
coefficients of the operators, and describe methods that allow their rapid
calculation. We determine the fields associated with adding or removing bonds,
both in the bulk, and along open and closed boundaries; some bond defects have
scaling dimension two, while others have scaling dimension four. We also
determine the corrections to bulk probabilities for local bond modifications
near open and closed boundaries.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figures; referee comments incorporated; Accepted by Phys.
Rev.
Spatial-temporal correlations in the process to self-organized criticality
A new type of spatial-temporal correlation in the process approaching to the
self-organized criticality is investigated for the two simple models for
biological evolution. The change behaviors of the position with minimum barrier
are shown to be quantitatively different in the two models. Different results
of the correlation are given for the two models. We argue that the correlation
can be used, together with the power-law distributions, as criteria for
self-organized criticality.Comment: 3 pages in RevTeX, 3 eps figure
Avalanche Merging and Continuous Flow in a Sandpile Model
A dynamical transition separating intermittent and continuous flow is
observed in a sandpile model, with scaling functions relating the transport
behaviors between both regimes. The width of the active zone diverges with
system size in the avalanche regime but becomes very narrow for continuous
flow. The change of the mean slope, Delta z, on increasing the driving rate, r,
obeys Delta z ~ r^{1/theta}. It has nontrivial scaling behavior in the
continuous flow phase with an exponent theta given, paradoxically, only in
terms of exponents characterizing the avalanches theta = (1+z-D)/(3-D).Comment: Explanations added; relation to other model
Exact equqations and scaling relations for f-avalanche in the Bak-Sneppen evolution model
Infinite hierarchy of exact equations are derived for the newly-observed
f-avalanche in the Bak-Sneppen evolution model. By solving the first order
exact equation, we found that the critical exponent which governs the
divergence of the average avalanche size, is exactly 1 (for all dimensions),
confirmed by the simulations. Solution of the gap equation yields another
universal exponent, denoting the the relaxation to the attractor, is exactly 1.
We also establish some scaling relations among the critical exponents of the
new avalanche.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figur
Noncommutative Vortex Solitons
We consider the noncommutative Abelian-Higgs theory and investigate general
static vortex configurations including recently found exact multi-vortex
solutions. In particular, we prove that the self-dual BPS solutions cease to
exist once the noncommutativity scale exceeds a critical value. We then study
the fluctuation spectra about the static configuration and show that the exact
non BPS solutions are unstable below the critical value. We have identified the
tachyonic degrees as well as massless moduli degrees. We then discuss the
physical meaning of the moduli degrees and construct exact time-dependent
vortex configurations where each vortex moves independently. We finally give
the moduli description of the vortices and show that the matrix nature of
moduli coordinates naturally emerges.Comment: 22 pages, 1 figure, typos corrected, a comment on the soliton size is
adde
d_c=4 is the upper critical dimension for the Bak-Sneppen model
Numerical results are presented indicating d_c=4 as the upper critical
dimension for the Bak-Sneppen evolution model. This finding agrees with
previous theoretical arguments, but contradicts a recent Letter [Phys. Rev.
Lett. 80, 5746-5749 (1998)] that placed d_c as high as d=8. In particular, we
find that avalanches are compact for all dimensions d<=4, and are fractal for
d>4. Under those conditions, scaling arguments predict a d_c=4, where
hyperscaling relations hold for d<=4. Other properties of avalanches, studied
for 1<=d<=6, corroborate this result. To this end, an improved numerical
algorithm is presented that is based on the equivalent branching process.Comment: 4 pages, RevTex4, as to appear in Phys. Rev. Lett., related papers
available at http://userwww.service.emory.edu/~sboettc
Distribution of repetitions of ancestors in genealogical trees
We calculate the probability distribution of repetitions of ancestors in a
genealogical tree for simple neutral models of a closed population with sexual
reproduction and non-overlapping generations. Each ancestor at generation g in
the past has a weight w which is (up to a normalization) the number of times
this ancestor appears in the genealogical tree of an individual at present. The
distribution P_g(w) of these weights reaches a stationary shape P_\infty(w) for
large g, i.e. for a large number of generations back in the past. For small w,
P_\infty(w) is a power law with a non-trivial exponent which can be computed
exactly using a standard procedure of the renormalization group approach. Some
extensions of the model are discussed and the effect of these variants on the
shape of P_\infty(w) are analysed.Comment: 20 pages, 5 figures included, to appear in Physica
Breakdown of self-organized criticality
We introduce two sandpile models which show the same behavior of real
sandpiles, that is, an almost self-organized critical behavior for small
systems and the dominance of large avalanches as the system size increases. The
systems become fully self-organized critical, with the critical exponents of
the Bak, Tang and Wiesenfeld model, as the system parameters are changed,
showing that these systems can make a bridge between the well known theoretical
and numerical results and what is observed in real experiments. We find that a
simple mechanism determines the boundary where self-organized can or cannot
exist, which is the presence of local chaos.Comment: 3 pages, 4 figure
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