1,148 research outputs found
Dissociative Adsorption: A Solvable Model
A model of "hot"-dimer deposition in one dimension, introduced by Pereyra and
Albano, is modified to have an unbounded dissociation range. The resulting
dynamical equations are solved exactly. A related k-mer dissociation model is
also introduced and its solution obtained as a quadrature.Comment: TeX (plain
A new model of binary opinion dynamics: coarsening and effect of disorder
We propose a model of binary opinion in which the opinion of the individuals
change according to the state of their neighbouring domains. If the
neighbouring domains have opposite opinions, then the opinion of the domain
with the larger size is followed. Starting from a random configuration, the
system evolves to a homogeneous state. The dynamical evolution show novel
scaling behaviour with the persistence exponent and
dynamic exponent . Introducing disorder through a
parameter called rigidity coefficient (probability that people are
completely rigid and never change their opinion), the transition to a
heterogeneous society at is obtained. Close to , the
equilibrium values of the dynamic variables show power law scaling behaviour
with . We also discuss the effect of having both quenched and annealed
disorder in the system.Comment: 4 pages, 6 figures, Final version of PR
Phase transitions in a two parameter model of opinion dynamics with random kinetic exchanges
Recently, a model of opinion formation with kinetic exchanges has been
proposed in which a spontaneous symmetry breaking transition was reported [M.
Lallouache et al, Phys. Rev. E, {\bf 82} 056112 (2010)]. We generalise the
model to incorporate two parameters, , to represent conviction and
, to represent the influencing ability of individuals. A phase boundary
given by is obtained separating the symmetric and symmetry
broken phases: the effect of the influencing term enhances the possibility of
reaching a consensus in the society. The time scale diverges near the phase
boundary in a power law manner. The order parameter and the condensate also
show power law growth close to the phase boundary albeit with different
exponents. Theexponents in general change along the phase boundary indicating a
non-universality. The relaxation times, however, become constant with
increasing system size near the phase boundary indicating the absence of any
diverging length scale. Consistently, the fluctuations remain finite but show
strong dependence on the trajectory along which it is estimated.Comment: Version accepted for PRE; text modified, new figures and references
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Bulk and surface transitions in asymmetric simple exclusion process: Impact on boundary layers
In this paper, we study boundary-induced phase transitions in a particle
non-conserving asymmetric simple exclusion process with open boundaries. Using
boundary layer analysis, we show that the key signatures of various bulk phase
transitions are present in the boundary layers of the density profiles. In
addition, we also find possibilities of surface transitions in the low- and
high- density phases. The surface transition in the low-density phase provides
a more complete description of the non-equilibrium critical point found in this
system.Comment: 9 pages including figure
Noise driven dynamic phase transition in a a one dimensional Ising-like model
The dynamical evolution of a recently introduced one dimensional model in
\cite{biswas-sen} (henceforth referred to as model I), has been made stochastic
by introducing a parameter such that corresponds to the
Ising model and to the original model I. The equilibrium
behaviour for any value of is identical: a homogeneous state. We
argue, from the behaviour of the dynamical exponent ,that for any , the system belongs to the dynamical class of model I indicating a
dynamic phase transition at . On the other hand, the persistence
probabilities in a system of spins saturate at a value , where remains constant for all supporting the existence of the dynamic phase transition at .
The scaling function shows a crossover behaviour with for and for
.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures, accepted version in Physical Review
Multi-shocks in asymmetric simple exclusions processes: Insights from fixed-point analysis of the boundary-layers
The boundary-induced phase transitions in an asymmetric simple exclusion
process with inter-particle repulsion and bulk non-conservation are analyzed
through the fixed points of the boundary layers. This system is known to have
phases in which particle density profiles have different kinds of shocks. We
show how this boundary-layer fixed-point method allows us to gain physical
insights on the nature of the phases and also to obtain several quantitative
results on the density profiles especially on the nature of the boundary-layers
and shocks.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figure
Revisiting the effect of external fields in Axelrod's model of social dynamics
The study of the effects of spatially uniform fields on the steady-state
properties of Axelrod's model has yielded plenty of controversial results. Here
we re-examine the impact of this type of field for a selection of parameters
such that the field-free steady state of the model is heterogeneous or
multicultural. Analyses of both one and two-dimensional versions of Axelrod's
model indicate that, contrary to previous claims in the literature, the steady
state remains heterogeneous regardless of the value of the field strength.
Turning on the field leads to a discontinuous decrease on the number of
cultural domains, which we argue is due to the instability of zero-field
heterogeneous absorbing configurations. We find, however, that spatially
nonuniform fields that implement a consensus rule among the neighborhood of the
agents enforces homogenization. Although the overall effects of the fields are
essentially the same irrespective of the dimensionality of the model, we argue
that the dimensionality has a significant impact on the stability of the
field-free homogeneous steady state
Absorbing-state phase transitions on percolating lattices
We study nonequilibrium phase transitions of reaction-diffusion systems
defined on randomly diluted lattices, focusing on the transition across the
lattice percolation threshold. To develop a theory for this transition, we
combine classical percolation theory with the properties of the supercritical
nonequilibrium system on a finite-size cluster. In the case of the contact
process, the interplay between geometric criticality due to percolation and
dynamical fluctuations of the nonequilibrium system leads to a new universality
class. The critical point is characterized by ultraslow activated dynamical
scaling and accompanied by strong Griffiths singularities. To confirm the
universality of this exotic scaling scenario we also study the generalized
contact process with several (symmetric) absorbing states, and we support our
theory by extensive Monte-Carlo simulations.Comment: 11 pages, 10 eps figures included, final version as publishe
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