5,003 research outputs found
Branched Polymers on the Given-Mandelbrot family of fractals
We study the average number A_n per site of the number of different
configurations of a branched polymer of n bonds on the Given-Mandelbrot family
of fractals using exact real-space renormalization. Different members of the
family are characterized by an integer parameter b, b > 1. The fractal
dimension varies from to 2 as b is varied from 2 to infinity. We
find that for all b > 2, A_n varies as , where
and are some constants, and . We determine the
exponent , and the size exponent (average diameter of polymer
varies as ), exactly for all b > 2. This generalizes the earlier results
of Knezevic and Vannimenus for b = 3 [Phys. Rev {\bf B 35} (1987) 4988].Comment: 24 pages, 8 figure
Effect of Noise on Patterns Formed by Growing Sandpiles
We consider patterns generated by adding large number of sand grains at a
single site in an abelian sandpile model with a periodic initial configuration,
and relaxing. The patterns show proportionate growth. We study the robustness
of these patterns against different types of noise, \textit{viz.}, randomness
in the point of addition, disorder in the initial periodic configuration, and
disorder in the connectivity of the underlying lattice. We find that the
patterns show a varying degree of robustness to addition of a small amount of
noise in each case. However, introducing stochasticity in the toppling rules
seems to destroy the asymptotic patterns completely, even for a weak noise. We
also discuss a variational formulation of the pattern selection problem in
growing abelian sandpiles.Comment: 15 pages,16 figure
Continuously varying exponents in a sandpile model with dissipation near surface
We consider the directed Abelian sandpile model in the presence of sink sites
whose density f_t at depth t below the top surface varies as c~1/t^chi. For
chi>1 the disorder is irrelevant. For chi<1, it is relevant and the model is no
longer critical for any nonzero c. For chi=1 the exponents of the avalanche
distributions depend continuously on the amplitude c of the disorder. We
calculate this dependence exactly, and verify the results with simulations.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in J. Stat. Phy
Fractal Dimension of Backbone of Eden Trees
We relate the fractal dimension of the backbone, and the spectral dimension
of Eden trees to the dynamical exponent z. In two dimensions, it gives fractal
dimension of backbone equal to 4/3 and spectral dimension of trees equal to
5/4. In three dimensions, it provides us a new way to estimate z numerically.
We get z=1.617 +/- 0.004.Comment: 6 pages, Latex, and 4 postscript figures, uuencoded. Minor
typographical errors, and problems with postscript files fixe
Inverse Avalanches On Abelian Sandpiles
A simple and computationally efficient way of finding inverse avalanches for
Abelian sandpiles, called the inverse particle addition operator, is presented.
In addition, the method is shown to be optimal in the sense that it requires
the minimum amount of computation among methods of the same kind. The method is
also conceptually nice because avalanche and inverse avalanche are placed in
the same footing.Comment: 5 pages with no figure IASSNS-HEP-94/7
Probability distribution of residence times of grains in models of ricepiles
We study the probability distribution of residence time of a grain at a site,
and its total residence time inside a pile, in different ricepile models. The
tails of these distributions are dominated by the grains that get deeply buried
in the pile. We show that, for a pile of size , the probabilities that the
residence time at a site or the total residence time is greater than , both
decay as for where
is an exponent , and values of and in the two
cases are different. In the Oslo ricepile model we find that the probability
that the residence time at a site being greater than or equal to ,
is a non-monotonic function of for a fixed and does not obey simple
scaling. For model in dimensions, we show that the probability of minimum
slope configuration in the steady state, for large , varies as where is a constant, and hence .Comment: 13 pages, 23 figures, Submitted to Phys. Rev.
Quasiadiabatic dynamics of ultracold bosonic atoms in a one-dimensional optical superlattice
We study the quasiadiabatic dynamics of a one-dimensional system of ultracold
bosonic atoms loaded in an optical superlattice. Focusing on a slow linear
variation in time of the superlattice potential, the system is driven from a
conventional Mott insulator phase to a superlattice-induced Mott insulator,
crossing in between a gapless critical superfluid region. Due to the presence
of a gapless region, a number of defects depending on the velocity of the
quench appear. Our findings suggest a power-law dependence similar to the
Kibble-Zurek mechanism for intermediate values of the quench rate. For the
temporal ranges of the quench dynamics that we considered, the scaling of
defects depends nontrivially on the width of the superfluid region.Comment: 6 Pages, 4 Figure
Drift and trapping in biased diffusion on disordered lattices
We reexamine the theory of transition from drift to no-drift in biased
diffusion on percolation networks. We argue that for the bias field B equal to
the critical value B_c, the average velocity at large times t decreases to zero
as 1/log(t). For B < B_c, the time required to reach the steady-state velocity
diverges as exp(const/|B_c-B|). We propose an extrapolation form that describes
the behavior of average velocity as a function of time at intermediate time
scales. This form is found to have a very good agreement with the results of
extensive Monte Carlo simulations on a 3-dimensional site-percolation network
and moderate bias.Comment: 4 pages, RevTex, 3 figures, To appear in International Journal of
Modern Physics C, vol.
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