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Phase transition universality classes of classical, nonequilibrium systems

In the first chapter I summarize the most important critical exponents and relations used in this work. In the second chapter I briefly address the question of scaling behavior at first order phase transitions.In chapter three I review dynamical extensions of basic static classes, show the effect of...

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Autor principal: Ódor, G
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2002
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1103/RevModPhys.76.663
http://cds.cern.ch/record/555678
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author Ódor, G
author_facet Ódor, G
author_sort Ódor, G
collection CERN
description In the first chapter I summarize the most important critical exponents and relations used in this work. In the second chapter I briefly address the question of scaling behavior at first order phase transitions.In chapter three I review dynamical extensions of basic static classes, show the effect of mixing dynamics and percolation behavior. The main body of this work is given in chapter four where genuine, dynamical universality classes specific to nonequilibrium systems are introduced. In chapter five I continue overviewing such nonequilibrium classes but in coupled, multi-component systems. Most of known transitions in low dimensional systems are between active and absorbing states of reaction-diffusion type systems, but I briefly introduce related classes that appear in interface growth models in chapter six. Some of them are related to critical behavior of coupled, multi-component systems. Finally in chapter seven I summarize families of absorbing state system classes, mean-field classes and the most frequently used abbreviations.
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institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
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spelling cern-5556782019-09-30T06:29:59Zdoi:10.1103/RevModPhys.76.663http://cds.cern.ch/record/555678engÓdor, GPhase transition universality classes of classical, nonequilibrium systemsCondensed MatterIn the first chapter I summarize the most important critical exponents and relations used in this work. In the second chapter I briefly address the question of scaling behavior at first order phase transitions.In chapter three I review dynamical extensions of basic static classes, show the effect of mixing dynamics and percolation behavior. The main body of this work is given in chapter four where genuine, dynamical universality classes specific to nonequilibrium systems are introduced. In chapter five I continue overviewing such nonequilibrium classes but in coupled, multi-component systems. Most of known transitions in low dimensional systems are between active and absorbing states of reaction-diffusion type systems, but I briefly introduce related classes that appear in interface growth models in chapter six. Some of them are related to critical behavior of coupled, multi-component systems. Finally in chapter seven I summarize families of absorbing state system classes, mean-field classes and the most frequently used abbreviations.cond-mat/0205644oai:cds.cern.ch:5556782002-05-30
spellingShingle Condensed Matter
Ódor, G
Phase transition universality classes of classical, nonequilibrium systems
title Phase transition universality classes of classical, nonequilibrium systems
title_full Phase transition universality classes of classical, nonequilibrium systems
title_fullStr Phase transition universality classes of classical, nonequilibrium systems
title_full_unstemmed Phase transition universality classes of classical, nonequilibrium systems
title_short Phase transition universality classes of classical, nonequilibrium systems
title_sort phase transition universality classes of classical, nonequilibrium systems
topic Condensed Matter
url https://dx.doi.org/10.1103/RevModPhys.76.663
http://cds.cern.ch/record/555678
work_keys_str_mv AT odorg phasetransitionuniversalityclassesofclassicalnonequilibriumsystems