824 research outputs found
Three basic issues concerning interface dynamics in nonequilibrium pattern formation
These are lecture notes of a course given at the 9th International Summer
School on Fundamental Problems in Statistical Mechanics, held in Altenberg,
Germany, in August 1997. In these notes, we discuss at an elementary level
three themes concerning interface dynamics that play a role in pattern forming
systems: (i) We briefly review three examples of systems in which the normal
growth velocity is proportional to the gradient of a bulk field which itself
obeys a Laplace or diffusion type of equation (solidification, viscous fingers
and streamers), and then discuss why the Mullins-Sekerka instability is common
to all such gradient systems. (ii) Secondly, we discuss how underlying an
effective interface description of systems with smooth fronts or transition
zones, is the assumption that the relaxation time of the appropriate order
parameter field(s) in the front region is much smaller than the time scale of
the evolution of interfacial patterns. Using standard arguments we illustrate
that this is generally so for fronts that separate two (meta)stable phases: in
such cases, the relaxation is typically exponential, and the relaxation time in
the usual models goes to zero in the limit in which the front width vanishes.
(iii) We finally summarize recent results that show that so-called ``pulled''
or ``linear marginal stability'' fronts which propagate into unstable states
have a very slow universal power law relaxation. This slow relaxation makes the
usual ``moving boundary'' or ``effective interface'' approximation for problems
with thin fronts, like streamers, impossible.Comment: 48 pages, TeX with elsart style file (included), 9 figure
Breakdown of the standard Perturbation Theory and Moving Boundary Approximation for "Pulled" Fronts
The derivation of a Moving Boundary Approximation or of the response of a
coherent structure like a front, vortex or pulse to external forces and noise,
is generally valid under two conditions: the existence of a separation of time
scales of the dynamics on the inner and outer scale and the existence and
convergence of solvability type integrals. We point out that these conditions
are not satisfied for pulled fronts propagating into an unstable state: their
relaxation on the inner scale is power law like and in conjunction with this,
solvability integrals diverge. The physical origin of this is traced to the
fact that the important dynamics of pulled fronts occurs in the leading edge of
the front rather than in the nonlinear internal front region itself. As recent
work on the relaxation and stochastic behavior of pulled fronts suggests, when
such fronts are coupled to other fields or to noise, the dynamical behavior is
often qualitatively different from the standard case in which fronts between
two (meta)stable states or pushed fronts propagating into an unstable state are
considered.Comment: pages Latex, submitted to a special issue of Phys. Rep. in dec. 9
Fluctuation and relaxation properties of pulled fronts: a possible scenario for non-Kardar-Parisi-Zhang behavior
We argue that while fluctuating fronts propagating into an unstable state
should be in the standard KPZ universality class when they are {\em pushed},
they should not when they are {\em pulled}: The universal velocity
relaxation of deterministic pulled fronts makes it unlikely that the KPZ
equation is the appropriate effective long-wavelength low-frequency theory in
this regime. Simulations in 2 confirm the proposed scenario, and yield
exponents , for
fluctuating pulled fronts, instead of the KPZ values , . Our value of is consistent with an earlier result of Riordan {\em
et al.}Comment: Replaced with revised versio
Convection in rotating annuli: Ginzburg-Landau equations with tunable coefficients
The coefficients of the complex Ginzburg-Landau equations that describe
weakly nonlinear convection in a large rotating annulus are calculated for a
range of Prandtl numbers . For fluids with , we
show that the rotation rate can tune the coefficients of the corresponding
amplitude equations from regimes where coherent patterns prevail to regimes of
spatio-temporal chaos.Comment: 4 pages (latex,multicol,epsf) including 3 figure
Force Mobilization and Generalized Isostaticity in Jammed Packings of Frictional Grains
We show that in slowly generated 2d packings of frictional spheres, a
significant fraction of the friction forces lies at the Coulomb threshold - for
small pressure p and friction coefficient mu, about half of the contacts.
Interpreting these contacts as constrained leads to a generalized concept of
isostaticity, which relates the maximal fraction of fully mobilized contacts
and contact number. For p->0, our frictional packings approximately satisfy
this relation over the full range of mu. This is in agreement with a previous
conjecture that gently built packings should be marginal solids at jamming. In
addition, the contact numbers and packing densities scale with both p and mu.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, submitte
Jammed frictionless discs: connecting local and global response
By calculating the linear response of packings of soft frictionless discs to
quasistatic external perturbations, we investigate the critical scaling
behavior of their elastic properties and non-affine deformations as a function
of the distance to jamming. Averaged over an ensemble of similar packings,
these systems are well described by elasticity, while in single packings we
determine a diverging length scale up to which the response of the
system is dominated by the local packing disorder. This length scale, which we
observe directly, diverges as , where is the difference
between contact number and its isostatic value, and appears to scale
identically to the length scale which had been introduced earlier in the
interpretation of the spectrum of vibrational modes. It governs the crossover
from isostatic behavior at the small scale to continuum behavior at the large
scale; indeed we identify this length scale with the coarse graining length
needed to obtain a smooth stress field. We characterize the non-affine
displacements of the particles using the \emph{displacement angle
distribution}, a local measure for the amount of relative sliding, and analyze
the connection between local relative displacements and the elastic moduli.Comment: 19 pages, 15 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Pattern forming pulled fronts: bounds and universal convergence
We analyze the dynamics of pattern forming fronts which propagate into an
unstable state, and whose dynamics is of the pulled type, so that their
asymptotic speed is equal to the linear spreading speed v^*. We discuss a
method that allows to derive bounds on the front velocity, and which hence can
be used to prove for, among others, the Swift-Hohenberg equation, the Extended
Fisher-Kolmogorov equation and the cubic Complex Ginzburg-Landau equation, that
the dynamically relevant fronts are of the pulled type. In addition, we
generalize the derivation of the universal power law convergence of the
dynamics of uniformly translating pulled fronts to both coherent and incoherent
pattern forming fronts. The analysis is based on a matching analysis of the
dynamics in the leading edge of the front, to the behavior imposed by the
nonlinear region behind it. Numerical simulations of fronts in the
Swift-Hohenberg equation are in full accord with our analytical predictions.Comment: 27 pages, 9 figure
Interaction of Ising-Bloch fronts with Dirichlet Boundaries
We study the Ising-Bloch bifurcation in two systems, the Complex Ginzburg
Landau equation (CGLE) and a FitzHugh Nagumo (FN) model in the presence of
spatial inhomogeneity introduced by Dirichlet boundary conditions. It is seen
that the interaction of fronts with boundaries is similar in both systems,
establishing the generality of the Ising-Bloch bifurcation. We derive reduced
dynamical equations for the FN model that explain front dynamics close to the
boundary. We find that front dynamics in a highly non-adiabatic (slow front)
limit is controlled by fixed points of the reduced dynamical equations, that
occur close to the boundary.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
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