94 research outputs found

    Slow regions percolate near glass transition

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    A nano-second scale in situ probe reveals that a bulk linear polymer undergoes a sharp phase transition as a function of the degree of conversion, as it nears the glass transition. The scaling behaviour is in the same universality class as percolation. The exponents \gamma and \beta are found to be 1.7 \pm .1 and 0.41\pm 0.01 in agreement with the best percolation results in three dimensions.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figure

    Hamiltonian model for multidimensional epistasis

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    We propose and solve a Hamiltonian model for multidimensional epistastatic interactions between beneficial mutations. The model is able to give rise either to a phase transition between two equilibrium states, without any coexistence, or exhibits a state where hybrid species can coexist, with gradual passage from one wild type to another. The transition takes place as a function of the "tolerance" of the environment, which we define as the amount of noise in the system.Comment: 3 pages, 2 figures (in seperate files) spelling corrected and a reference adde

    Analytical Solution of a Stochastic Content Based Network Model

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    We define and completely solve a content-based directed network whose nodes consist of random words and an adjacency rule involving perfect or approximate matches, for an alphabet with an arbitrary number of letters. The analytic expression for the out-degree distribution shows a crossover from a leading power law behavior to a log-periodic regime bounded by a different power law decay. The leading exponents in the two regions have a weak dependence on the mean word length, and an even weaker dependence on the alphabet size. The in-degree distribution, on the other hand, is much narrower and does not show scaling behavior. The results might be of interest for understanding the emergence of genomic interaction networks, which rely, to a large extent, on mechanisms based on sequence matching, and exhibit similar global features to those found here.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figures. Rewrote conclusions regarding the relevance to gene regulation networks, fixed minor errors and replaced fig. 4. Main body of paper (model and calculations) remains unchanged. Submitted for publicatio

    Continuous RSB mean-field solution of the Potts glass

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    We investigate the p-state mean-field model of the Potts glass (2p42\le p \le 4) below the continuous phase transition to a glassy phase. We find that apart from a solution with a first hierarchical level of replica-symmetry breaking (1RSB), locally stable close to the transition point, there is a continuous full replica-symmetry breaking (FRSB) solution. The latter is marginally stable and has a higher free energy than the former. We argue that the true equilibrium is reached only by FRSB, being globally thermodynamically homogeneous, whereas 1RSB is only locally homogeneous.Comment: REVTeX4.1, 4 pages, 1 figur

    Dynamical real-space renormalization group calculations with a new clustering scheme on random networks

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    We have defined a new type of clustering scheme preserving the connectivity of the nodes in network ignored by the conventional Migdal-Kadanoff bond moving process. Our new clustering scheme performs much better for correlation length and dynamical critical exponents in high dimensions, where the conventional Migdal-Kadanoff bond moving scheme breaks down. In two and three dimensions we find the dynamical critical exponents for the kinetic Ising Model to be z=2.13 and z=2.09, respectively at pure Ising fixed point. These values are in very good agreement with recent Monte Carlo results. We investigate the phase diagram and the critical behaviour for randomly bond diluted lattices in d=2 and 3, in the light of this new transformation. We also provide exact correlation exponent and dynamical critical exponent values on hierarchical lattices with power-law degree distributions, both in the pure and random cases.Comment: 8 figure

    Non-Parametric Analyses of Log-Periodic Precursors to Financial Crashes

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    We apply two non-parametric methods to test further the hypothesis that log-periodicity characterizes the detrended price trajectory of large financial indices prior to financial crashes or strong corrections. The analysis using the so-called (H,q)-derivative is applied to seven time series ending with the October 1987 crash, the October 1997 correction and the April 2000 crash of the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA), the Standard & Poor 500 and Nasdaq indices. The Hilbert transform is applied to two detrended price time series in terms of the ln(t_c-t) variable, where t_c is the time of the crash. Taking all results together, we find strong evidence for a universal fundamental log-frequency f=1.02±0.05f = 1.02 \pm 0.05 corresponding to the scaling ratio λ=2.67±0.12\lambda = 2.67 \pm 0.12. These values are in very good agreement with those obtained in past works with different parametric techniques.Comment: Latex document 13 pages + 58 eps figure

    Log-periodic route to fractal functions

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    Log-periodic oscillations have been found to decorate the usual power law behavior found to describe the approach to a critical point, when the continuous scale-invariance symmetry is partially broken into a discrete-scale invariance (DSI) symmetry. We classify the `Weierstrass-type'' solutions of the renormalization group equation F(x)= g(x)+(1/m)F(g x) into two classes characterized by the amplitudes A(n) of the power law series expansion. These two classes are separated by a novel ``critical'' point. Growth processes (DLA), rupture, earthquake and financial crashes seem to be characterized by oscillatory or bounded regular microscopic functions g(x) that lead to a slow power law decay of A(n), giving strong log-periodic amplitudes. In contrast, the regular function g(x) of statistical physics models with ``ferromagnetic''-type interactions at equibrium involves unbound logarithms of polynomials of the control variable that lead to a fast exponential decay of A(n) giving weak log-periodic amplitudes and smoothed observables. These two classes of behavior can be traced back to the existence or abscence of ``antiferromagnetic'' or ``dipolar''-type interactions which, when present, make the Green functions non-monotonous oscillatory and favor spatial modulated patterns.Comment: Latex document of 29 pages + 20 ps figures, addition of a new demonstration of the source of strong log-periodicity and of a justification of the general offered classification, update of reference lis

    Critical Behavior of the Sandpile Model as a Self-Organized Branching Process

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    Kinetic equations, which explicitly take into account the branching nature of sandpile avalanches, are derived. The dynamics of the sandpile model is described by the generating functions of a branching process. Having used the results obtained the renormalization group approach to the critical behavior of the sandpile model is generalized in order to calculate both critical exponents and height probabilities.Comment: REVTeX, twocolumn, 4 page
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