Infinite-noise criticality: Nonequilibrium phase transitions in fluctuating environments

ORAL

Abstract

We study the effects of time-varying environmental noise on nonequilibrium phase transitions in spreading and growth processes. Using the examples of the logistic evolution equation as well as the contact process, we show that such temporal disorder gives rise to a distinct type of critical points at which the effective noise amplitude diverges on long time scales. This leads to enormous density fluctuations characterized by an infinitely broad probability distribution at criticality. We develop a real-time renormalization-group theory that provides a general framework for the effects of temporal disorder on nonequilibrium processes. We also discuss how general this exotic critical behavior is, we illustrate the results by computer simulations, and we touch upon experimental applications of our theory.

*Supported by the NSF under Grant No.\ DMR-1205803, by Simons Foundation, by FAPESP under Grant No.\ 2013/09850-7, and by CNPq under Grant Nos.\ 590093/2011-8 and 305261/2012-6.

Authors

  • Thomas Vojta

    • Missouri S\&T
    • Missouri Univ of Science and Technology
    • Missouri Univ of Sci & Tech
  • Jose Hoyos

    • Instituto de F\'{i}sica de S\~ao Carlos