Absorbing state phase transitions with quenched disorder

Jef Hooyberghs, Ferenc Iglói, and Carlo Vanderzande
Phys. Rev. E 69, 066140 – Published 23 June 2004

Abstract

Quenched disorder—in the sense of the Harris criterion—is generally a relevant perturbation at an absorbing state phase transition point. Here using a strong disorder renormalization group framework and effective numerical methods we study the properties of random fixed points for systems in the directed percolation universality class. For strong enough disorder the critical behavior is found to be controlled by a strong disorder fixed point, which is isomorph with the fixed point of random quantum Ising systems. In this fixed point dynamical correlations are logarithmically slow and the static critical exponents are conjecturedly exact for one-dimensional systems. The renormalization group scenario is confronted with numerical results on the random contact process in one and two dimensions and satisfactory agreement is found. For weaker disorder the numerical results indicate static critical exponents which vary with the strength of disorder, whereas the dynamical correlations are compatible with two possible scenarios. Either they follow a power-law decay with a varying dynamical exponent, like in random quantum systems, or the dynamical correlations are logarithmically slow even for a weak disorder. For models in the parity conserving universality class there is no strong disorder fixed point according to our renormalization group analysis.

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  • Received 3 February 2004

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevE.69.066140

©2004 American Physical Society

Authors & Affiliations

Jef Hooyberghs

  • Department WNI, Limburgs Universitair Centrum, 3590 Diepenbeek, Belgium, Laboratorium voor Vaste-Stoffysica en Magnetisme, Celestijnenlaan 200D, 3001 Heverlee, Belgium, and VITO, Flemisch Institute for Technological Research, Boeretang 200, 2400 Mol, Belgium

Ferenc Iglói

  • Research Institute for Solid State Physics and Optics, H-1525 Budapest, P. O. Box, 49, Hungary, and Institute of Theoretical Physics, Szeged University, H-6720 Szeged, Hungary

Carlo Vanderzande

  • Department WNI, Limburgs Universitair Centrum, 3590 Diepenbeek, Belgium and Instituut voor Theoretische Fysica, Celestijnenlaan 200D, 3001 Heverlee, Belgium

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Vol. 69, Iss. 6 — June 2004

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