English

On the study of force-balance percolation

Disordered Systems and Neural Networks 2013-05-29 v1 Soft Condensed Matter

Abstract

We study models of correlated percolation where there are constraints on the occupation of sites that mimic force-balance, i.e. for a site to be stable requires occupied neighboring sites in all four compass directions in two dimensions. We prove rigorously that pc<1p_c<1 for the two-dimensional models studied. Numerical data indicate that the force-balance percolation transition is discontinuous with a growing crossover length, with perhaps the same form as the jamming percolation models, suggesting the same underlying mechanism driving the transition in both cases. In other words, force-balance percolation and jamming percolation may indeed belong to the same universality class. We find a lower bound for the correlation length in the connected phase and that the correlation function does not appear to be a power law at the transition. Finally, we study the dynamics of the culling procedure invoked to obtain the force-balance configurations and find a dynamical exponent similar to that found in sandpile models.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0806.1552,
  title  = {On the study of force-balance percolation},
  author = {M. Jeng and J. M. Schwarz},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0806.1552},
  year   = {2013}
}

Comments

15 pages, 32 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-21T10:48:56.911Z