702 research outputs found
Corrections to scaling for percolative conduction: anomalous behavior at small L
Recently Grassberger has shown that the correction to scaling for the
conductance of a bond percolation network on a square lattice is a nonmonotonic
function of the linear lattice dimension with a minimum at , while this
anomalous behavior is not present in the site percolation networks. We perform
a high precision numerical study of the bond percolation random resistor
networks on the square, triangular and honeycomb lattices to further examine
this result. We use the arithmetic, geometric and harmonic means to obtain the
conductance and find that the qualitative behavior does not change: it is not
related to the shape of the conductance distribution for small system sizes. We
show that the anomaly at small L is absent on the triangular and honeycomb
networks. We suggest that the nonmonotonic behavior is an artifact of
approximating the continuous system for which the theory is formulated by a
discrete one which can be simulated on a computer. We show that by slightly
changing the definition of the linear lattice size we can eliminate the minimum
at small L without significantly affecting the large L limit.Comment: 3 pages, 4 figures;slightly expanded, 2 figures added. Accepted for
publishing in Phys. Rev.
Epidemic analysis of the second-order transition in the Ziff-Gulari-Barshad surface-reaction model
We study the dynamic behavior of the Ziff-Gulari-Barshad (ZGB) irreversible
surface-reaction model around its kinetic second-order phase transition, using
both epidemic and poisoning-time analyses. We find that the critical point is
given by p_1 = 0.3873682 \pm 0.0000015, which is lower than the previous value.
We also obtain precise values of the dynamical critical exponents z, \delta,
and \eta which provide further numerical evidence that this transition is in
the same universality class as directed percolation.Comment: REVTEX, 4 pages, 5 figures, Submitted to Physical Review
Precise determination of the bond percolation thresholds and finite-size scaling corrections for the s.c., f.c.c., and b.c.c. lattices
Extensive Monte-Carlo simulations were performed to study bond percolation on
the simple cubic (s.c.), face-centered cubic (f.c.c.), and body-centered cubic
(b.c.c.) lattices, using an epidemic kind of approach. These simulations
provide very precise values of the critical thresholds for each of the
lattices: pc(s.c.) = 0.248 812 6(5), pc(f.c.c.) = 0.120 163 5(10), and
pc(b.c.c.) = 0.180 287 5(10). For p close to pc, the results follow the
expected finite-size and scaling behavior, with values for the Fisher exponent
(2.189(2)), the finite-size correction exponent (0.64(2)), and
the scaling function exponent (0.445(1)) confirmed to be universal.Comment: 16 pgs, 7 figures, LaTeX, to be published in Phys. Rev.
Scaling behavior of explosive percolation on the square lattice
Clusters generated by the product-rule growth model of Achlioptas, D'Souza,
and Spencer on a two-dimensional square lattice are shown to obey qualitatively
different scaling behavior than standard (random growth) percolation. The
threshold with unrestricted bond placement (allowing loops) is found precisely
using several different criteria based upon both moments and wrapping
probabilities, yielding p_c = 0.526565 +/- 0.000005, consistent with the recent
result of Radicchi and Fortunato. The correlation-length exponent nu is found
to be close to 1. The qualitative difference from regular percolation is shown
dramatically in the behavior of the percolation probability P_(infinity) (size
of largest cluster), the susceptibility, and of the second moment of finite
clusters, where discontinuities appears at the threshold. The critical
cluster-size distribution does not follow a consistent power-law for the range
of system sizes we study L 2
for larger L.Comment: v2: Updated results in original version with new data; expanded
discussion. v3: Resubmitted version. New figures, reference
On the universality of distribution of ranked cluster masses at critical percolation
The distribution of masses of clusters smaller than the infinite cluster is
evaluated at the percolation threshold. The clusters are ranked according to
their masses and the distribution of the scaled masses M for any
rank r shows a universal behaviour for different lattice sizes L (D is the
fractal dimension). For different ranks however, there is a universal
distribution function only in the large rank limit, i.e., (y and are defined in the text), where the
universal scaling function g is found to be Gaussian in nature.Comment: 4 pages, to appear in J. Phys.
Efficient Monte Carlo algorithm and high-precision results for percolation
We present a new Monte Carlo algorithm for studying site or bond percolation
on any lattice. The algorithm allows us to calculate quantities such as the
cluster size distribution or spanning probability over the entire range of site
or bond occupation probabilities from zero to one in a single run which takes
an amount of time scaling linearly with the number of sites on the lattice. We
use our algorithm to determine that the percolation transition occurs at
occupation probability 0.59274621(13) for site percolation on the square
lattice and to provide clear numerical confirmation of the conjectured
4/3-power stretched-exponential tails in the spanning probability functions.Comment: 8 pages, including 3 postscript figures, minor corrections in this
version, plus updated figures for the position of the percolation transitio
Kinetics of catalysis with surface disorder
We study the effects of generalised surface disorder on the monomer-monomer
model of heterogeneous catalysis, where disorder is implemented by allowing
different adsorption rates for each lattice site. By mapping the system in the
reaction-controlled limit onto a kinetic Ising model, we derive the rate
equations for the one and two-spin correlation functions. There is good
agreement between these equations and numerical simulations. We then study the
inclusion of desorption of monomers from the substrate, first by both species
and then by just one, and find exact time-dependent solutions for the one-spin
correlation functions.Comment: LaTex, 19 pages, 1 figure included, requires epsf.st
Recent advances and open challenges in percolation
Percolation is the paradigm for random connectivity and has been one of the
most applied statistical models. With simple geometrical rules a transition is
obtained which is related to magnetic models. This transition is, in all
dimensions, one of the most robust continuous transitions known. We present a
very brief overview of more than 60 years of work in this area and discuss
several open questions for a variety of models, including classical, explosive,
invasion, bootstrap, and correlated percolation
The Largest Cluster in Subcritical Percolation
The statistical behavior of the size (or mass) of the largest cluster in
subcritical percolation on a finite lattice of size is investigated (below
the upper critical dimension, presumably ). It is argued that as the cumulative distribution function converges to the Fisher-Tippett
(or Gumbel) distribution in a certain weak sense (when suitably
normalized). The mean grows like , where is a
``crossover size''. The standard deviation is bounded near with persistent fluctuations due to discreteness. These
predictions are verified by Monte Carlo simulations on square lattices of
up to 30 million sites, which also reveal finite-size scaling. The results are
explained in terms of a flow in the space of probability distributions as . The subcritical segment of the physical manifold ()
approaches a line of limit cycles where the flow is approximately described by
a ``renormalization group'' from the classical theory of extreme order
statistics.Comment: 16 pages, 5 figs, expanded version to appear in Phys Rev
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