850 research outputs found
On stability of the three-dimensional fixed point in a model with three coupling constants from the expansion: Three-loop results
The structure of the renormalization-group flows in a model with three
quartic coupling constants is studied within the -expansion method up
to three-loop order. Twofold degeneracy of the eigenvalue exponents for the
three-dimensionally stable fixed point is observed and the possibility for
powers in to appear in the series is investigated.
Reliability and effectiveness of the -expansion method for the given
model is discussed.Comment: 14 pages, LaTeX, no figures. To be published in Phys. Rev. B, V.57
(1998
The grand canonical ABC model: a reflection asymmetric mean field Potts model
We investigate the phase diagram of a three-component system of particles on
a one-dimensional filled lattice, or equivalently of a one-dimensional
three-state Potts model, with reflection asymmetric mean field interactions.
The three types of particles are designated as , , and . The system is
described by a grand canonical ensemble with temperature and chemical
potentials , , and . We find that for
the system undergoes a phase transition from a
uniform density to a continuum of phases at a critical temperature . For other values of the chemical potentials the system
has a unique equilibrium state. As is the case for the canonical ensemble for
this model, the grand canonical ensemble is the stationary measure
satisfying detailed balance for a natural dynamics. We note that , where is the critical temperature for a similar transition in
the canonical ensemble at fixed equal densities .Comment: 24 pages, 3 figure
Coarsening of "clouds" and dynamic scaling in a far-from-equilibrium model system
A two-dimensional lattice gas of two species, driven in opposite directions
by an external force, undergoes a jamming transition if the filling fraction is
sufficiently high. Using Monte Carlo simulations, we investigate the growth of
these jams ("clouds"), as the system approaches a non-equilibrium steady state
from a disordered initial state. We monitor the dynamic structure factor
and find that the component exhibits dynamic scaling, of
the form . Over a significant range
of times, we observe excellent data collapse with and .
The effects of varying filling fraction and driving force are discussed
Phase diagram of the ABC model with nonconserving processes
The three species ABC model of driven particles on a ring is generalized to
include vacancies and particle-nonconserving processes. The model exhibits
phase separation at high densities. For equal average densities of the three
species, it is shown that although the dynamics is {\it local}, it obeys
detailed balance with respect to a Hamiltonian with {\it long-range
interactions}, yielding a nonadditive free energy. The phase diagrams of the
conserving and nonconserving models, corresponding to the canonical and
grand-canonical ensembles, respectively, are calculated in the thermodynamic
limit. Both models exhibit a transition from a homogeneous to a phase-separated
state, although the phase diagrams are shown to differ from each other. This
conforms with the expected inequivalence of ensembles in equilibrium systems
with long-range interactions. These results are based on a stability analysis
of the homogeneous phase and exact solution of the hydrodynamic equations of
the models. They are supported by Monte-Carlo simulations. This study may serve
as a useful starting point for analyzing the phase diagram for unequal
densities, where detailed balance is not satisfied and thus a Hamiltonian
cannot be defined.Comment: 32 page, 7 figures. The paper was presented at Statphys24, held in
Cairns, Australia, July 201
Critical behavior of three-dimensional magnets with complicated ordering from three-loop renormalization-group expansions
The critical behavior of a model describing phase transitions in 3D
antiferromagnets with 2N-component real order parameters is studied within the
renormalization-group (RG) approach. The RG functions are calculated in the
three-loop order and resummed by the generalized Pade-Borel procedure
preserving the specific symmetry properties of the model. An anisotropic stable
fixed point is found to exist in the RG flow diagram for N > 1 and lies near
the Bose fixed point; corresponding critical exponents are close to those of
the XY model. The accuracy of the results obtained is discussed and estimated.Comment: 10 pages, LaTeX, revised version published in Phys. Rev.
Phase transition in a non-conserving driven diffusive system
An asymmetric exclusion process comprising positive particles, negative
particles and vacancies is introduced. The model is defined on a ring and the
dynamics does not conserve the number of particles. We solve the steady state
exactly and show that it can exhibit a continuous phase transition in which the
density of vacancies decreases to zero. The model has no absorbing state and
furnishes an example of a one-dimensional phase transition in a homogeneous
non-conserving system which does not belong to the absorbing state universality
classes
Steady States of a Nonequilibrium Lattice Gas
We present a Monte Carlo study of a lattice gas driven out of equilibrium by
a local hopping bias. Sites can be empty or occupied by one of two types of
particles, which are distinguished by their response to the hopping bias. All
particles interact via excluded volume and a nearest-neighbor attractive force.
The main result is a phase diagram with three phases: a homogeneous phase, and
two distinct ordered phases. Continuous boundaries separate the homogeneous
phase from the ordered phases, and a first-order line separates the two ordered
phases. The three lines merge in a nonequilibrium bicritical point.Comment: 14 pages, 24 figure
Multidimensional spectroscopy with a single broadband phase-shaped laser pulse
We calculate the frequency-dispersed nonlinear transmission signal of a
phase-shaped visible pulse to fourth order in the field. Two phase profiles, a
phase-step and phase-pulse, are considered. Two dimensional signals obtained by
varying the detected frequency and phase parameters are presented for a three
electronic band model system. We demonstrate how two-photon and stimulated
Raman resonances can be manipulated by the phase profile and sign, and selected
quantum pathways can be suppressed.Comment: 26 pages, 15 figure
Anomalous nucleation far from equilibrium
We present precision Monte Carlo data and analytic arguments for an
asymmetric exclusion process, involving two species of particles driven in
opposite directions on a lattice. We propose a scenario which
resolves a stark discrepancy between earlier simulation data, suggesting the
existence of an ordered phase, and an analytic conjecture according to which
the system should revert to a disordered state in the thermodynamic limit. By
analyzing the finite size effects in detail, we argue that the presence of a
single, seemingly macroscopic, cluster is an intermediate stage of a complex
nucleation process: In smaller systems, this cluster is destabilized while
larger systems allow the formation of multiple clusters. Both limits lead to
exponential cluster size distributions which are, however, controlled by very
different length scales.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, one colum
Competition of coarsening and shredding of clusters in a driven diffusive lattice gas
We investigate a driven diffusive lattice gas model with two oppositely
moving species of particles. The model is motivated by bi-directional traffic
of ants on a pre-existing trail. A third species, corresponding to pheromones
used by the ants for communication, is not conserved and mediates interactions
between the particles. Here we study the spatio-temporal organization of the
particles. In the uni-directional variant of this model it is known to be
determined by the formation and coarsening of ``loose clusters''. For our
bi-directional model, we show that the interaction of oppositely moving
clusters is essential. In the late stages of evolution the cluster size
oscillates because of a competition between their `shredding' during encounters
with oppositely moving counterparts and subsequent "coarsening" during
collision-free evolution. We also establish a nontrivial dependence of the
spatio-temporal organization on the system size
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