arXiv Analytics

Sign in

arXiv:1604.04487 [cond-mat.stat-mech]AbstractReferencesReviewsResources

Phase Transitions and Scaling in Systems Far From Equilibrium

Uwe C. Täuber

Published 2016-04-15Version 1

Scaling ideas and renormalization group approaches proved crucial for a deep understanding and classification of critical phenomena in thermal equilibrium. Over the past decades, these powerful conceptual and mathematical tools were extended to continuous phase transitions separating distinct non-equilibrium stationary states in driven classical and quantum systems. In concordance with detailed numerical simulations and laboratory experiments, several prominent dynamical universality classes have emerged that govern large-scale, long-time scaling properties both near and far from thermal equilibrium. These pertain to genuine specific critical points as well as entire parameter space regions for steady states that display generic scale invariance. The exploration of non-stationary relaxation properties and associated physical aging scaling constitutes a complementary potent means to characterize cooperative dynamics in complex out-of-equilibrium systems. This article describes dynamic scaling features through paradigmatic examples that include near-equilibrium critical dynamics, driven lattice gases and growing interfaces, correlation-dominated reaction-diffusion systems, and basic epidemic models.

Related articles: Most relevant | Search more
arXiv:cond-mat/9905003 (Published 1999-05-01)
One-Dimensional Arrays of Oscillators: Energy Localization in Thermal Equilibrium
arXiv:cond-mat/0607205 (Published 2006-07-07, updated 2006-11-30)
Casimir-Lifshitz force out of thermal equilibrium and asymptotic non-additivity
Transition to thermal equilibrium in a deformed crystal