English

Random fields at a nonequilibrium phase transition

Statistical Mechanics 2012-10-30 v2 Disordered Systems and Neural Networks

Abstract

We investigate nonequilibrium phase transitions in the presence of disorder that locally breaks the symmetry between two equivalent macroscopic states. In low-dimensional equilibrium systems, such "random-field" disorder is known to have dramatic effects: It prevents spontaneous symmetry breaking and completely destroys the phase transition. In contrast, we demonstrate that the phase transition of the one-dimensional generalized contact process persists in the presence of random field disorder. The dynamics in the symmetry-broken phase becomes ultraslow and is described by a Sinai walk of the domain walls between two different absorbing states. We discuss the generality and limitations of our theory, and we illustrate our results by means of large-scale Monte-Carlo simulations.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1206.1878,
  title  = {Random fields at a nonequilibrium phase transition},
  author = {Hatem Barghathi and Thomas Vojta},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1206.1878},
  year   = {2012}
}

Comments

5 pages, 4 eps figures included, final version as published

R2 v1 2026-06-21T21:16:36.461Z