Self-Referential Order
Abstract
We introduce the concept of {\it self-referential order} which provides a way to quantify structural organization in non crystalline materials. The key idea consists in the observation that, in a disordered system, where there is no ideal, reference, template structure, each sub-portion of the whole structure can be taken as reference for the rest and the system can be described in terms of its parts in a self-referential way. Some of the parts carry larger information about the rest of the structure and they are identified as {\it motifs}. We discuss how this method can efficiently reduce the amount of information required to describe a complex disordered structure by encoding it in a set of motifs and {\it matching rules}. We propose an information-theoretic approach to define a {\it self-referential-order-parameter} and we show that, by means of entropic measures, such a parameter can be quantified explicitly. A proof of concept application to equal disk packing is presented and discussed.
Cite
@article{arxiv.1305.5090,
title = {Self-Referential Order},
author = {T. Aste and P. Butler and T. Di Matteo},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1305.5090},
year = {2014}
}
Comments
9 pages 4 figures