1,468 research outputs found
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
Reply to "Comment on `Performance of different synchronization measures in real data: A case study on electroencephalographic signals'"
We agree with the Comment by Nicolaou and Nasuto about the utility of mutual information (MI) when properly estimated and we also concur with their view that the estimation based on k nearest neighbors gives optimal results. However, we claim that embedding parameters can indeed change MI results, as we show for the electroencephalogram data sets of our original study and for coupled chaotic systems. Furthermore, we show that proper embedding can actually improve the estimation of MI with the k nearest neighbors algorithm
Percolation in Media with Columnar Disorder
We study a generalization of site percolation on a simple cubic lattice,
where not only single sites are removed randomly, but also entire parallel
columns of sites. We show that typical clusters near the percolation transition
are very anisotropic, with different scaling exponents for the sizes parallel
and perpendicular to the columns. Below the critical point there is a Griffiths
phase where cluster size distributions and spanning probabilities in the
direction parallel to the columns have power law tails with continuously
varying non-universal powers. This region is very similar to the Griffiths
phase in subcritical directed percolation with frozen disorder in the preferred
direction, and the proof follows essentially the same arguments as in that
case. But in contrast to directed percolation in disordered media, the number
of active ("growth") sites in a growing cluster at criticality shows a power
law, while the probability of a cluster to continue to grow shows logarithmic
behavior.Comment: 9 pages, 9 figure
Event synchronization: a simple and fast method to measure synchronicity and time delay patterns
We propose a simple method to measure synchronization and time delay patterns
between signals. It is based on the relative timings of events in the time
series, defined e.g. as local maxima. The degree of synchronization is obtained
from the number of quasi-simultaneous appearances of events, and the delay is
calculated from the precedence of events in one signal with respect to the
other. Moreover, we can easily visualize the time evolution of the delay and
synchronization level with an excellent resolution.
We apply the algorithm to short rat EEG signals, some of them containing
spikes. We also apply it to an intracranial human EEG recording containing an
epileptic seizure, and we propose that the method might be useful for the
detection of foci and for seizure prediction. It can be easily extended to
other types of data and it is very simple and fast, thus being suitable for
on-line implementations.Comment: 6 pages, including 6 figures, RevTe
Compact parity conserving percolation in one-dimension
Compact directed percolation is known to appear at the endpoint of the
directed percolation critical line of the Domany-Kinzel cellular automaton in
1+1 dimension. Equivalently, such transition occurs at zero temperature in a
magnetic field H, upon changing the sign of H, in the one-dimensional
Glauber-Ising model with well known exponents characterising spin-cluster
growth. We have investigated here numerically these exponents in the
non-equilibrium generalization (NEKIM) of the Glauber model in the vicinity of
the parity-conserving phase transition point of the kinks. Critical
fluctuations on the level of kinks are found to affect drastically the
characteristic exponents of spreading of spins while the hyperscaling relation
holds in its form appropriate for compact clusters.Comment: 7 pages, 7 figures embedded in the latex, final form before J.Phys.A
publicatio
Sandpile model on a quenched substrate generated by kinetic self-avoiding trails
Kinetic self-avoiding trails are introduced and used to generate a substrate
of randomly quenched flow vectors. Sandpile model is studied on such a
substrate with asymmetric toppling matrices where the precise balance between
the net outflow of grains from a toppling site and the total inflow of grains
to the same site when all its neighbors topple once is maintained at all sites.
Within numerical accuracy this model behaves in the same way as the
multiscaling BTW model.Comment: Four pages, five figure
Phase transitions and critical behaviour in one-dimensional non-equilibrium kinetic Ising models with branching annihilating random walk of kinks
One-dimensional non-equilibrium kinetic Ising models evolving under the
competing effect of spin flips at zero temperature and nearest-neighbour spin
exchanges exhibiting directed percolation-like parity conserving(PC) phase
transition on the level of kinks are now further investigated, numerically,
from the point of view of the underlying spin system. Critical exponents
characterising its statics and dynamics are reported. It is found that the
influence of the PC transition on the critical exponents of the spins is strong
and the origin of drastic changes as compared to the Glauber-Ising case can be
traced back to the hyperscaling law stemming from directed percolation(DP).
Effect of an external magnetic field, leading to DP-type critical behaviour on
the level of kinks, is also studied, mainly through the generalised mean field
approximation.Comment: 15 pages, using RevTeX, 13 Postscript figures included, submitted to
J.Phys.A, figures 12 and 13 fixe
The three species monomer-monomer model in the reaction-controlled limit
We study the one dimensional three species monomer-monomer reaction model in
the reaction controlled limit using mean-field theory and dynamic Monte Carlo
simulations. The phase diagram consists of a reactive steady state bordered by
three equivalent adsorbing phases where the surface is saturated with one
monomer species. The transitions from the reactive phase are all continuous,
while the transitions between adsorbing phases are first-order. Bicritical
points occur where the reactive phase simultaneously meets two adsorbing
phases. The transitions from the reactive to an adsorbing phase show directed
percolation critical behaviour, while the universal behaviour at the bicritical
points is in the even branching annihilating random walk class. The results are
contrasted and compared to previous results for the adsorption-controlled limit
of the same model.Comment: 12 pages using RevTeX, plus 4 postscript figures. Uses psfig.sty.
accepted to Journal of Physics
One Dimensional Nonequilibrium Kinetic Ising Models with Branching Annihilating Random Walk
Nonequilibrium kinetic Ising models evolving under the competing effect of
spin flips at zero temperature and nearest neighbour spin exchanges at
are investigated numerically from the point of view of a phase
transition. Branching annihilating random walk of the ferromagnetic domain
boundaries determines the steady state of the system for a range of parameters
of the model. Critical exponents obtained by simulation are found to agree,
within error, with those in Grassberger's cellular automata.Comment: 10 pages, Latex, figures upon request, SZFKI 05/9
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