44,002 research outputs found
Width and extremal height distributions of fluctuating interfaces with window boundary conditions
We present a detailed study of squared local roughness (SLRDs) and local
extremal height distributions (LEHDs), calculated in windows of lateral size
, for interfaces in several universality classes, in substrate dimensions
and . We show that their cumulants follow a Family-Vicsek
type scaling, and, at early times, when ( is the correlation
length), the rescaled SLRDs are given by log-normal distributions, with their
th cumulant scaling as . This give rise to an
interesting temporal scaling for such cumulants , with . This scaling is analytically
proved for the Edwards-Wilkinson (EW) and Random Deposition interfaces, and
numerically confirmed for other classes. In general, it is featured by small
corrections and, thus, it yields exponents 's (and, consequently,
, and ) in nice agreement with their respective universality
class. Thus, it is an useful framework for numerical and experimental
investigations, where it is, usually, hard to estimate the dynamic and
mainly the (global) roughness exponents. The stationary (for ) SLRDs and LEHDs of Kardar-Parisi-Zhang (KPZ) class are also investigated
and, for some models, strong finite-size corrections are found. However, we
demonstrate that good evidences of their universality can be obtained through
successive extrapolations of their cumulant ratios for long times and large
's. We also show that SLRDs and LEHDs are the same for flat and curved KPZ
interfaces.Comment: 11 pages, 10 figures, 4 table
The collision of two-kinks defects
We have investigated the head-on collision of a two-kink and a two-antikink
pair that arises as a generalization of the model. We have evolved
numerically the Klein-Gordon equation with a new spectral algorithm whose
accuracy and convergence were attested by the numerical tests. As a general
result, the two-kink pair is annihilated radiating away most of the scalar
field. It is possible the production of oscillons-like configurations after the
collision that bounce and coalesce to form a small amplitude oscillon at the
origin. The new feature is the formation of a sequence of quasi-stationary
structures that we have identified as lump-like solutions of non-topological
nature. The amount of time these structures survives depends on the fine-tuning
of the impact velocity.Comment: 14 pages, 9 figure
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