Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7374519 | Physica A: Statistical Mechanics and its Applications | 2018 | 13 Pages |
Abstract
A dissipative stochastic sandpile model is constructed on one and two dimensional small-world networks with shortcut density Ï, Ï=0 represents a regular lattice whereas Ï=1 represents a random network. The effect of the transformation of the regular lattice to a small-world network on the critical behaviour of the model as well as the role of dimensionality of the underlying regular lattice are explored studying different geometrical properties of the avalanches as a function of avalanche size s in the small-world regime (2â12â¤Ïâ¤0.1). For both the dimensions, three regions of s, separated by two crossover sizes s1 and s2 (s1s1 are sparse as they are on network and follow mean-field scaling. Coexistence of different scaling forms in the small-world regime leads to violation of usual finite-size scaling which were valid on the regular lattice as well as on the random network independently. Simultaneous appearance of multiple scaling forms are characterized by developing a coexistence scaling theory. As SWN evolves from regular lattice to random network, a crossover from diffusive to super-diffusive nature of sand transport is observed and scaling forms of such crossover is developed and verified.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Mathematics
Mathematical Physics
Authors
Himangsu Bhaumik, S.B. Santra,