481 research outputs found

    Violation of the Widom scaling law for effective crossover exponents

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    In this work we consider the universal crossover behavior of two non-equilibrium systems exhibiting a continuous phase transition. Focusing on the field driven crossover from mean-field to non-mean-field scaling behavior we show that the well-known Widom scaling law is violated for the effective exponents in the so-called crossover regime.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.

    Continuously varying exponents in a sandpile model with dissipation near surface

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    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

    Universal scaling behavior of directed percolation around the upper critical dimension

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    In this work we consider the steady state scaling behavior of directed percolation around the upper critical dimension. In particular we determine numerically the order parameter, its fluctuations as well as the susceptibility as a function of the control parameter and the conjugated field. Additionally to the universal scaling functions, several universal amplitude combinations are considered. We compare our results with those of a renormalization group approach.Comment: 19 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in J. Stat. Phy

    A deterministic sandpile automaton revisited

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    The Bak-Tang-Wiesenfeld (BTW) sandpile model is a cellular automaton which has been intensively studied during the last years as a paradigm for self-organized criticality. In this paper, we reconsider a deterministic version of the BTW model introduced by Wiesenfeld, Theiler and McNamara, where sand grains are added always to one fixed site on the square lattice. Using the Abelian sandpile formalism we discuss the static properties of the system. We present numerical evidence that the deterministic model is only in the BTW universality class if the initial conditions and the geometric form of the boundaries do not respect the full symmetry of the square lattice.Comment: 7 pages, 8 figures, EPJ style, accepted for publication in European Physical Journal

    Density fluctuations and phase separation in a traffic flow model

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    Within the Nagel-Schreckenberg traffic flow model we consider the transition from the free flow regime to the jammed regime. We introduce a method of analyzing the data which is based on the local density distribution. This analyzes allows us to determine the phase diagram and to examine the separation of the system into a coexisting free flow phase and a jammed phase above the transition. The investigation of the steady state structure factor yields that the decomposition in this phase coexistence regime is driven by density fluctuations, provided they exceed a critical wavelength.Comment: in 'Traffic and Granular Flow 97', edited by D.E. Wolf and M. Schreckenberg, Springer, Singapore (1998

    Interface Motion in Disordered Ferromagnets

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    We consider numerically the depinning transition in the random-field Ising model. Our analysis reveals that the three and four dimensional model displays a simple scaling behavior whereas the five dimensional scaling behavior is affected by logarithmic corrections. This suggests that d=5 is the upper critical dimension of the depinning transition in the random-field Ising model. Furthermore, we investigate the so-called creep regime (small driving fields and temperatures) where the interface velocity is given by an Arrhenius law.Comment: some misprints correcte

    Cluster mean-field study of the parity conserving phase transition

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    The phase transition of the even offspringed branching and annihilating random walk is studied by N-cluster mean-field approximations on one-dimensional lattices. By allowing to reach zero branching rate a phase transition can be seen for any N <= 12.The coherent anomaly extrapolations applied for the series of approximations results in ν⊥=1.85(3)\nu_{\perp}=1.85(3) and β=0.96(2)\beta=0.96(2).Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures, 1 table included, Minor changes, scheduled for pubication in PR
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