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Overview""The career structure and funding of the universities [...] currently strongly d- courages academics and faculties from putting any investment into teaching - there are no career or ?nancial rewards in it. This is a great pity, because [...] it is the need toengage indialogue,and to makethings logicaland clear,that istheprimary defence against obscurantism and abstraction. "" B. Ward-Perkins, The fall of Rome, Oxford (2005) This is the ?rst volume of a planned two-volume treatise on non-equilibrium phase transitions. While such a topic might sound rather special and a- demic, non-equilibrium critical phenomena occur in much wider contexts than their equilibrium counterparts, and without having to ?ne-tune th- modynamic variables to their 'critical' values in each case. As a matter of fact, most systems in Nature are out of equilibrium. Given that the theme of non-equilibrium phase transitions of second order is wide enough to amount essentially to a treatment of almost all theoretical aspects of non-equilibrium many-body physics, a selection of topics is required to keep such a project within a manageable length. Therefore, Vol. 1 discusses a particular kind of non-equilibrium phase transitions, namely those between an active, ?- tuating state and absorbing states. Volume 2 (to be written by one of us (MH) with M. Pleimling) will be devoted to ageing phenomena. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Malte Henkel , Haye Hinrichsen , Sven LübeckPublisher: Springer-Verlag New York Inc. Imprint: Springer-Verlag New York Inc. Edition: 2009 ed. Dimensions: Width: 15.50cm , Height: 2.30cm , Length: 23.50cm Weight: 0.770kg ISBN: 9781402087646ISBN 10: 1402087640 Pages: 385 Publication Date: 15 January 2009 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of Contents1 Introduction. Problems. 2 Survey of Equilibrium Critical Phenomena 2.1 Phase Transitions in Equilibrium Systems 2.2 Scale Invariance and Universality 2.3 Mean-field and Renormalisation Group Methods 2.4 Fluctuation-dissipation Theorem 2.5 From Scale-invariance to Conformal Invariance. Problems. 3 Directed percolation 3.1 Directed Percolation at First Glance 3.2 Directed Percolation as a Stochastic Process 3.3 Lattice Models of Directed Percolation 3.4 Experiments related to Directed Percolation. Problems. 4 Scaling Properties of Absorbing Phase Transitions 4.1 Scaling in the Steady State 4.2 Dynamical Scaling Behaviour 4.3 Methods of Analysis 4.4 Other Critical Properties. Problems. 5 Universality classes different from directed percolation 5.1 Parity-Conserving Universality Class 5.2 Voter Universality Class 5.3 Compact Directed Percolation 5.4 Tricritical Directed Percolation 5.5 Dynamical Percolation 5.6 Long-range Interactions 5.7 Manna Universality Class 5.8 Pair Contact Process with Diffusion 5.9 First-order Phase Transitions 5.10 Crossover Phenomena 5.11 Quenched Disorder. Problems. Appendices: A Equilibrium Models A.1 Potts model A.2 Clock model A.3 Turban model A.4 Baxter-Wu model A.5 Blume-Capel model A.6 XY model A.7 O(n) model A.8 Double exchange model A.9 Frustrated spin models A.10 Hilhorst-van Leeuven model B Scaling Laws C Diagonalisation of Time-Evolution Operators D Langevin Equations and Path Integrals E Mean-Field Approximations E.1 Simple mean-field/site approximation E.2 Pair-approximation E.3 The ‘hop-away’ mean-field approximation F On Finite-Size Scaling Techniques F.1 Sequences of finite-size estimates F.2 Sequence extrapolation G Numerical Methods G.1 Simulational techniques G.2 Computation of response functions. Solutions. Frequently Used Symbols. Abbreviations. References. Index.ReviewsThe monograph concentrates on nonequilibrium phase transitions from fluctuating (ordered) states into so-called absorbing states, which can never be left by the system once reached. ! Extended appendices (plus solutions of excercises and answers to problems) on specific models ! make the book useful not only to scientists and lecturers, but also to advanced graduate students. (Piotr Garbaczewski, Zentralblatt MATH, Vol. 1165, 2009) Author InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |