8 research outputs found
Dynamical and stationary critical behavior of the Ising ferromagnet in a thermal gradient
In this paper we present and discuss results of Monte Carlo numerical
simulations of the two-dimensional Ising ferromagnet in contact with a heat
bath that intrinsically has a thermal gradient. The extremes of the magnet are
at temperatures , where is the Onsager critical temperature.
In this way one can observe a phase transition between an ordered phase
() by means of a single simulation. By
starting the simulations with fully disordered initial configurations with
magnetization corresponding to , which are then suddenly
annealed to a preset thermal gradient, we study the short-time critical dynamic
behavior of the system. Also, by setting a small initial magnetization ,
we study the critical initial increase of the order parameter. Furthermore, by
starting the simulations from fully ordered configurations, which correspond to
the ground state at T=0 and are subsequently quenched to a preset gradient, we
study the critical relaxation dynamics of the system. Additionally, we perform
stationary measurements () that are discussed in terms of
the standard finite-size scaling theory. We conclude that our numerical
simulation results of the Ising magnet in a thermal gradient, which are
rationalized in terms of both dynamic and standard scaling arguments, are fully
consistent with well established results obtained under equilibrium conditions
Magnetic order in the Ising model with parallel dynamics
It is discussed how the equilibrium properties of the Ising model are
described by an Hamiltonian with an antiferromagnetic low temperature behavior
if only an heat bath dynamics, with the characteristics of a Probabilistic
Cellular Automaton, is assumed to determine the temporal evolution of the
system.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figure
Study of Percolative Transitions with First-Order Characteristics in the Context of CMR Manganites
The unusual magneto-transport properties of manganites are widely believed to
be caused by mixed-phase tendencies and concomitant percolative processes.
However, dramatic deviations from "standard" percolation have been unveiled
experimentally. Here, a semi-phenomenological description of Mn oxides is
proposed based on coexisting clusters with smooth surfaces, as suggested by
Monte Carlo simulations of realistic models for manganites, also briefly
discussed here. The present approach produces fairly abrupt percolative
transitions and even first-order discontinuities, in agreement with
experiments. These transitions may describe the percolation that occurs after
magnetic fields align the randomly oriented ferromagnetic clusters believed to
exist above the Curie temperature in Mn oxides. In this respect, part of the
manganite phenomenology could belong to a new class of percolative processes
triggered by phase competition and correlations.Comment: 4 pages, 4 eps figure
Slow relaxation in microcanonical warming of a Ising lattice
We study the warming process of a semi-infinite cylindrical Ising lattice
initially ordered and coupled at the boundary to a heat reservoir. The adoption
of a proper microcanonical dynamics allows a detailed study of the time
evolution of the system. As expected, thermal propagation displays a diffusive
character and the spatial correlations decay exponentially in the direction
orthogonal to the heat flow. However, we show that the approach to equilibrium
presents an unexpected slow behavior. In particular, when the thermostat is at
infinite temperature, correlations decay to their asymptotic values by a power
law. This can be rephrased in terms of a correlation length vanishing
logarithmically with time. At finite temperature, the approach to equilibrium
is also a power law, but the exponents depend on the temperature in a
non-trivial way. This complex behavior could be explained in terms of two
dynamical regimes characterizing finite and infinite temperatures,
respectively. When finite sizes are considered, we evidence the emergence of a
much more rapid equilibration, and this confirms that the microcanonical
dynamics can be successfully applied on finite structures. Indeed, the slowness
exhibited by correlations in approaching the asymptotic values are expected to
be related to the presence of an unsteady heat flow in an infinite system.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures; Published in Eur. Phys. J. B (2011
Lyapunov exponents of one-dimensional, binary stochastic cellular automata
In this paper the stability of elementary cellular automata (ECAs) upon introduction of stochasticity, in the form of an update probability for each cell, is assessed. To do this, Lyapunov exponents, which quantify the rate of divergence between two nearby trajectories in phase space, were used. Furthermore, the number of negative Lyapunov exponents was tracked, in order to gain a more profound insight into the interference between the stability and the update probability, and an upper bound on the Lyapunov exponents of stochastic cellular automata (SCAs) was established