280 research outputs found
Low-Temperature Long-Time Simulations of Ising Ferromagnets using the Monte Carlo with Absorbing Markov Chains method
The Monte Carlo with Absorbing Markov Chains (MCAMC) method is introduced.
This method is a generalization of the rejection-free method known as the
-fold way. The MCAMC algorithm is applied to the study of the very
low-temperature properties of the lifetime of the metastable state of Ising
ferromagnets. This is done both for square-lattice and cubic-lattice
nearest-neighbor models. Comparison is made with exact low-temperature
predictions, in particular the low-temperature predictions that the metastable
lifetime is discontinuous at particular values of the field. This discontinuity
for the square lattice is not seen in finite-temperatures studies. For the
cubic lattice, it is shown that these `exact predictions' are incorrect near
the fields where there are discontinuities. The low-temperature formula must be
modified and the corrected low-temperature predictions are not discontinuous in
the energy of the nucleating droplet.Comment: Submitted to Computer Physics Communicatinos, for proceedings of the
Conference CCP2001, 4 figure
Network Synchronization in a Noisy Environment with Time Delays: Fundamental Limits and Trade-Offs
We study the effects of nonzero time delays in stochastic synchronization
problems with linear couplings in an arbitrary network. Using the known exact
threshold value from the theory of differential equations with delays, we
provide the synchronizability threshold for an arbitrary network. Further, by
constructing the scaling theory of the underlying fluctuations, we establish
the absolute limit of synchronization efficiency in a noisy environment with
uniform time delays, i.e., the minimum attainable value of the width of the
synchronization landscape. Our results have also strong implications for
optimization and trade-offs in network synchronization with delays.Comment: 3 figure
Diffusion Processes on Power-Law Small-World Networks
We consider diffusion processes on power-law small-world networks in
different dimensions. In one dimension, we find a rich phase diagram, with
different transient and recurrent phases, including a critical line with
continuously varying exponents. The results were obtained using self-consistent
perturbation theory and can also be understood in terms of a scaling theory,
which provides a general framework for understanding processes on small-world
networks with different distributions of long-range links.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, added references, modified Fig. 2 with added data
(PRL, in press
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