97 research outputs found
Field Theory of Branching and Annihilating Random Walks
We develop a systematic analytic approach to the problem of branching and
annihilating random walks, equivalent to the diffusion-limited reaction
processes 2A->0 and A->(m+1)A, where m>=1. Starting from the master equation, a
field-theoretic representation of the problem is derived, and fluctuation
effects are taken into account via diagrammatic and renormalization group
methods. For d>2, the mean-field rate equation, which predicts an active phase
as soon as the branching process is switched on, applies qualitatively for both
even and odd m, but the behavior in lower dimensions is shown to be quite
different for these two cases. For even m, and d~2, the active phase still
appears immediately, but with non-trivial crossover exponents which we compute
in an expansion in eps=2-d, and with logarithmic corrections in d=2. However,
there exists a second critical dimension d_c'~4/3 below which a non-trivial
inactive phase emerges, with asymptotic behavior characteristic of the pure
annihilation process. This is confirmed by an exact calculation in d=1. The
subsequent transition to the active phase, which represents a new non-trivial
dynamic universality class, is then investigated within a truncated loop
expansion. For odd m, we show that the fluctuations of the annihilation process
are strong enough to create a non-trivial inactive phase for all d<=2. In this
case, the transition to the active phase is in the directed percolation
universality class.Comment: 39 pages, LaTex, 10 figures included as eps-files; submitted to J.
Stat. Phys; slightly revised versio
Multicritical behavior in coupled directed percolation processes
We study a hierarchy of directed percolation (DP) processes for particle
species A, B, ..., unidirectionally coupled via the reactions A -> B, ... When
the DP critical points at all levels coincide, multicritical behavior emerges,
with density exponents \beta^{(k)} which are markedly reduced at each hierarchy
level k >= 2. We compute the fluctuation corrections to \beta^{(2)} to
O(\epsilon = 4-d) using field-theoretic renormalization group techniques. Monte
Carlo simulations are employed to determine the new exponents in dimensions d
<= 3.Comment: 5 pages, RevTex, no figures; final version, to appear in Phys. Rev.
Lett. (1998
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