21,247 research outputs found
Breaking of scale-invariance symmetry in adsorption processes
Standard models of sequential adsorption are implicitly formulated in a {\em
scale invariant} form, by assuming adsorption on an infinite surface, with no
characteristic length scales. In real situations, however, involving complex
surfaces, intrinsic length scales may be relevant. We present an analytic model
of continuous random sequential adsorption, in which the scale invariance
symmetry is explicitly broken. The characteristic length is imposed by a set of
scattered obstacles, previously adsorbed onto the surface. We show, by means of
analytic solutions and numerical simulations, the profound effects of the
symmetry breaking on both the jamming limit and the correlation function of the
adsorbed layer.Comment: 7 pages, 2 eps figures, EPL style. Europhys. Lett. (in press
The architecture of complex weighted networks
Networked structures arise in a wide array of different contexts such as
technological and transportation infrastructures, social phenomena, and
biological systems. These highly interconnected systems have recently been the
focus of a great deal of attention that has uncovered and characterized their
topological complexity. Along with a complex topological structure, real
networks display a large heterogeneity in the capacity and intensity of the
connections. These features, however, have mainly not been considered in past
studies where links are usually represented as binary states, i.e. either
present or absent. Here, we study the scientific collaboration network and the
world-wide air-transportation network, which are representative examples of
social and large infrastructure systems, respectively. In both cases it is
possible to assign to each edge of the graph a weight proportional to the
intensity or capacity of the connections among the various elements of the
network. We define new appropriate metrics combining weighted and topological
observables that enable us to characterize the complex statistical properties
and heterogeneity of the actual strength of edges and vertices. This
information allows us to investigate for the first time the correlations among
weighted quantities and the underlying topological structure of the network.
These results provide a better description of the hierarchies and
organizational principles at the basis of the architecture of weighted
networks
The non-linear q-voter model
We introduce a non-linear variant of the voter model, the q-voter model, in
which q neighbors (with possible repetition) are consulted for a voter to
change opinion. If the q neighbors agree, the voter takes their opinion; if
they do not have an unanimous opinion, still a voter can flip its state with
probability . We solve the model on a fully connected network (i.e.
in mean-field) and compute the exit probability as well as the average time to
reach consensus. We analyze the results in the perspective of a recently
proposed Langevin equation aimed at describing generic phase transitions in
systems with two ( symmetric) absorbing states. We find that in mean-field
the q-voter model exhibits a disordered phase for high and an
ordered one for low with three possible ways to go from one to the
other: (i) a unique (generalized voter-like) transition, (ii) a series of two
consecutive Ising-like and directed percolation transition, and (iii) a series
of two transitions, including an intermediate regime in which the final state
depends on initial conditions. This third (so far unexplored) scenario, in
which a new type of ordering dynamics emerges, is rationalized and found to be
specific of mean-field, i.e. fluctuations are explicitly shown to wash it out
in spatially extended systems.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figure
- …
