129 research outputs found
Transport on Directed Percolation Clusters
We study random lattice networks consisting of resistor like and diode like
bonds. For investigating the transport properties of these random resistor
diode networks we introduce a field theoretic Hamiltonian amenable to
renormalization group analysis. We focus on the average two-port resistance at
the transition from the nonpercolating to the directed percolating phase and
calculate the corresponding resistance exponent to two-loop order.
Moreover, we determine the backbone dimension of directed percolation
clusters to two-loop order. We obtain a scaling relation for that is in
agreement with well known scaling arguments.Comment: 4 page
Avalanches and Correlations in Driven Interface Depinning
We study the critical behavior of a driven interface in a medium with random
pinning forces by analyzing spatial and temporal correlations in a lattice
model recently proposed by Sneppen [Phys. Rev. Lett. {\bf 69}, 3539 (1992)].
The static and dynamic behavior of the model is related to the properties of
directed percolation. We show that, due to the interplay of local and global
growth rules, the usual method of dynamical scaling has to be modified. We
separate the local from the global part of the dynamics by defining a train of
causal growth events, or "avalanche", which can be ascribed a well-defined
dynamical exponent where is the
roughness exponent of the interface. We observe that the avalanche size
distribution obeys a power-law decay with an exponent .Comment: 7 pages, (5 figures available upon request), REVTeX, RUB-TP3-93-0
Dynamics of a Driven Single Flux Line in Superconductors
We study the low temperature dynamics of a single flux line in a bulk type-II
superconductor, driven by a surface current, both near and above the onset of
an instability which sets in at a critical driving. We found that above the
critical driving, the velocity profile of the flux line develops a
discontinuity.Comment: 10 pages with 4 figures, REVTE
Multifractal properties of resistor diode percolation
Focusing on multifractal properties we investigate electric transport on
random resistor diode networks at the phase transition between the
non-percolating and the directed percolating phase. Building on first
principles such as symmetries and relevance we derive a field theoretic
Hamiltonian. Based on this Hamiltonian we determine the multifractal moments of
the current distribution that are governed by a family of critical exponents
. We calculate the family to two-loop order in a
diagrammatic perturbation calculation augmented by renormalization group
methods.Comment: 21 pages, 5 figures, to appear in Phys. Rev.
Collective Transport in Arrays of Quantum Dots
(WORDS: QUANTUM DOTS, COLLECTIVE TRANSPORT, PHYSICAL EXAMPLE OF KPZ)
Collective charge transport is studied in one- and two-dimensional arrays of
small normal-metal dots separated by tunnel barriers. At temperatures well
below the charging energy of a dot, disorder leads to a threshold for
conduction which grows linearly with the size of the array. For short-ranged
interactions, one of the correlation length exponents near threshold is found
from a novel argument based on interface growth. The dynamical exponent for the
current above threshold is also predicted analytically, and the requirements
for its experimental observation are described.Comment: 12 pages, 3 postscript files included, REVTEX v2, (also available by
anonymous FTP from external.nj.nec.com, in directory /pub/alan/dotarrays [as
separate files]) [replacement: FIX OF WRONG VERSION, BAD SHAR] March 17,
1993, NEC
Elastic String in a Random Medium
We consider a one dimensional elastic string as a set of massless beads
interacting through springs characterized by anisotropic elastic constants. The
string, driven by an external force, moves in a medium with quenched disorder.
We present evidence that the consideration of longitudinal fluctuations leads
to nonlinear behavior in the equation of motion which is {\it kinematically}
generated by the motion of the string. The strength of the nonlinear effects
depends on the anisotropy of the medium and the distance from the depinning
transition. On the other hand the consideration of restricted solid on solid
conditions imposed to the growth of the string leads to a nonlinear term in the
equation of motion with a {\it diverging} coefficient at the depinning
transition.Comment: 9 pages, REVTEX, figures available upon request from
[email protected]
Invading interfaces and blocking surfaces in high dimensional disordered systems
We study the high-dimensional properties of an invading front in a disordered
medium with random pinning forces. We concentrate on interfaces described by
bounded slope models belonging to the quenched KPZ universality class. We find
a number of qualitative transitions in the behavior of the invasion process as
dimensionality increases. In low dimensions the system is characterized
by two different roughness exponents, the roughness of individual avalanches
and the overall interface roughness. We use the similarity of the dynamics of
an avalanche with the dynamics of invasion percolation to show that above
avalanches become flat and the invasion is well described as an annealed
process with correlated noise. In fact, for the overall roughness is
the same as the annealed roughness. In very large dimensions, strong
fluctuations begin to dominate the size distribution of avalanches, and this
phenomenon is studied on the Cayley tree, which serves as an infinite
dimensional limit. We present numerical simulations in which we measured the
values of the critical exponents of the depinning transition, both in finite
dimensional lattices with and on the Cayley tree, which support our
qualitative predictions. We find that the critical exponents in are very
close to their values on the Cayley tree, and we conjecture on this basis the
existence of a further dimension, where mean field behavior is obtained.Comment: 12 pages, REVTeX with 2 postscript figure
Driven Depinning in Anisotropic Media
We show that the critical behavior of a driven interface, depinned from
quenched random impurities, depends on the isotropy of the medium. In
anisotropic media the interface is pinned by a bounding (conducting) surface
characteristic of a model of mixed diodes and resistors. Different universality
classes describe depinning along a hard and a generic direction. The exponents
in the latter (tilted) case are highly anisotropic, and obtained exactly by a
mapping to growing surfaces. Various scaling relations are proposed in the
former case which explain a number of recent numerical observations.Comment: 4 pages with 2 postscript figures appended, REVTe
d_c=4 is the upper critical dimension for the Bak-Sneppen model
Numerical results are presented indicating d_c=4 as the upper critical
dimension for the Bak-Sneppen evolution model. This finding agrees with
previous theoretical arguments, but contradicts a recent Letter [Phys. Rev.
Lett. 80, 5746-5749 (1998)] that placed d_c as high as d=8. In particular, we
find that avalanches are compact for all dimensions d<=4, and are fractal for
d>4. Under those conditions, scaling arguments predict a d_c=4, where
hyperscaling relations hold for d<=4. Other properties of avalanches, studied
for 1<=d<=6, corroborate this result. To this end, an improved numerical
algorithm is presented that is based on the equivalent branching process.Comment: 4 pages, RevTex4, as to appear in Phys. Rev. Lett., related papers
available at http://userwww.service.emory.edu/~sboettc
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