1,645 research outputs found
Exact solutions of a restricted ballistic deposition model on a one-dimensional staircase
Surface structure of a restricted ballistic deposition(RBD) model is examined
on a one-dimensional staircase with free boundary conditions. In this model,
particles can be deposited only at the steps of the staircase. We set up
recurrence relations for the surface fluctuation width using generating
function method. Steady-state solutions are obtained exactly given system size
. In the infinite-size limit, diverges as with the scaling
exponent . The dynamic exponent
is also found to be by solving the recurrence relations
numerically. This model can be viewed as a simple variant of the model which
belongs to the Kardar-Parisi-Zhang (KPZ) universality class . Comparing its deposition time scale
with that of the single-step model, we argue that must be the same as
, which is consistent with our finding.Comment: 19 pages, REVTEX, 5 figures upon request, INHA-PHYS-94-00
New method to study stochastic growth equations: a cellular automata perspective
We introduce a new method based on cellular automata dynamics to study
stochastic growth equations. The method defines an interface growth process
which depends on height differences between neighbors. The growth rule assigns
a probability exp for a site to
receive one particle at a time and all the sites are updated
simultaneously. Here and are two parameters and
is a function which depends on height of the site and its neighbors. Its
functional form is specified through discretization of the deterministic part
of the growth equation associated to a given deposition process. In particular,
we apply this method to study two linear equations - the Edwards-Wilkinson (EW)
equation and the Mullins-Herring (MH) equation - and a non-linear one - the
Kardar-Parisi-Zhang (KPZ) equation. Through simulations and statistical
analysis of the height distributions of the profiles, we recover the values for
roughening exponents, which confirm that the processes generated by the method
are indeed in the universality classes of the original growth equations. In
addition, a crossover from Random Deposition to the associated correlated
regime is observed when the parameter is varied.Comment: 6 pages, 7 figure
Faceted anomalous scaling in the epitaxial growth of semiconductor films
We apply the generic dynamical scaling theory (GDST) to the surfaces of CdTe
polycrystalline films grown in glass substrates. The analysed data were
obtained with a stylus profiler with an estimated resolution lateral resolution
of m. Both real two-point correlation function and power spectrum
analyses were done. We found that the GDST applied to the surface power spectra
foresees faceted morphology in contrast with the self-affine surface indicated
by the local roughness exponent found via the height-height correlation
function. This inconsistency is explained in terms of convolution effects
resulting from the finite size of the probe tip used to scan the surfaces. High
resolution AFM images corroborates the predictions of GDST.Comment: to appear in Europhysics Letter
Mathematics of random growing interfaces
We establish a thermodynamic limit and Gaussian fluctuations for the height
and surface width of the random interface formed by the deposition of particles
on surfaces. The results hold for the standard ballistic deposition model as
well as the surface relaxation model in the off-lattice setting. The results
are proved with the aid of general limit theorems for stabilizing functionals
of marked Poisson point processes.Comment: 12 page
Anisotropic Diffusion Limited Aggregation
Using stochastic conformal mappings we study the effects of anisotropic
perturbations on diffusion limited aggregation (DLA) in two dimensions. The
harmonic measure of the growth probability for DLA can be conformally mapped
onto a constant measure on a unit circle. Here we map preferred directions
for growth of angular width to a distribution on the unit circle which
is a periodic function with peaks in such that the width
of each peak scales as , where defines the
``strength'' of anisotropy along any of the chosen directions. The two
parameters map out a parameter space of perturbations that allows a
continuous transition from DLA (for or ) to needle-like fingers
as . We show that at fixed the effective fractal dimension of
the clusters obtained from mass-radius scaling decreases with
increasing from to a value bounded from below by
. Scaling arguments suggest a specific form for the dependence
of the fractal dimension on for large , form which compares
favorably with numerical results.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Scaling Behavior of Driven Interfaces Above the Depinning Transition
We study the depinning transition for models representative of each of the
two universality classes of interface roughening with quenched disorder. For
one of the universality classes, the roughness exponent changes value at the
transition, while the dynamical exponent remains unchanged. We also find that
the prefactor of the width scales with the driving force. We propose several
scaling relations connecting the values of the exponents on both sides of the
transition, and discuss some experimental results in light of these findings.Comment: Revtex 3.0, 4 pages in PRL format + 5 figures (available at
ftp://jhilad.bu.edu/pub/abbhhss/ma-figures.tar.Z ) submitted to Phys Rev Let
New set of measures to analyze non-equilibrium structures
We introduce a set of statistical measures that can be used to quantify
non-equilibrium surface growth. They are used to deduce new information about
spatiotemporal dynamics of model systems for spinodal decomposition and surface
deposition. Patterns growth in the Cahn-Hilliard Equation (used to model
spinodal decomposition) are shown to exhibit three distinct stages. Two models
of surface growth, namely the continuous Kardar-Parisi-Zhang (KPZ) model and
the discrete Restricted-Solid-On-Solid (RSOS) model are shown to have different
saturation exponents
Dynamic properties in a family of competitive growing models
The properties of a wide variety of growing models, generically called
, are studied by means of numerical simulations and analytic
developments. The study comprises the following models: Ballistic
Deposition, Random Deposition with Surface Relaxation, Das Sarma-Tamboronea,
Kim-Kosterlitz, Lai-Das Sarma, Wolf-Villain, Large Curvature, and three
additional models that are variants of the Ballistic Deposition model.
It is shown that after a growing regime, the interface width becomes
saturated at a crossover time () that, by fixing the sample size,
scales with according to , where
is an exponent. Also, the interface width at saturation () scales
as , where is another
exponent.
It is proved that, in any dimension, the exponents and obey the
following relationship: , where is
the growing exponent for . Furthermore, both exponents exhibit universality
in the limit.
By mapping the behaviour of the average height difference of two neighbouring
sites in discrete models of type and two kinds of random walks, we have
determined the exact value of the exponent .
Finally, by linking four well-established universality classes (namely
Edwards-Wilkinson, Kardar-Parisi-Zhang, Linear-MBE and Non-linear-MBE) with the
properties of both random walks, eight different stochastic equations for all
the competitive models studied are derived.Comment: 23 pages, 6 figures, Submitted to Phys. Rev.
Dynamic scaling and universality in evolution of fluctuating random networks
We found that models of evolving random networks exhibit dynamic scaling
similar to scaling of growing surfaces. It is demonstrated by numerical
simulations of two variants of the model in which nodes are added as well as
removed [Phys. Rev. Lett. 83, 5587 (1999)]. The averaged size and connectivity
of the network increase as power-laws in early times but later saturate.
Saturated values and times of saturation change with paramaters controlling the
local evolution of the network topology. Both saturated values and times of
saturation obey also power-law dependences on controlling parameters. Scaling
exponents are calculated and universal features are discussed.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures, Europhysics Letters for
- …