Crackling noise in fractional percolation

2013 | journal article. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.

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​Crackling noise in fractional percolation​
Schroeder, M.; Rahbari, S. H. E. & Nagler, J.​ (2013) 
Nature Communications4 art. 2222​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms3222 

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Authors
Schroeder, Malte; Rahbari, S. H. Ebrahimnazhad; Nagler, Jan
Abstract
Crackling noise is a common feature in many systems that are pushed slowly, the most familiar instance of which is the sound made by a sheet of paper when crumpled. In percolation and regular aggregation, clusters of any size merge until a giant component dominates the entire system. Here we establish 'fractional percolation', in which the coalescence of clusters that substantially differ in size is systematically suppressed. We identify and study percolation models that exhibit multiple jumps in the order parameter where the position and magnitude of the jumps are randomly distributed-characteristic of crackling noise. This enables us to express crackling noise as a result of the simple concept of fractional percolation. In particular, the framework allows us to link percolation with phenomena exhibiting non-self-averaging and power law fluctuations such as Barkhausen noise in ferromagnets.
Issue Date
2013
Status
published
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
Journal
Nature Communications 
ISSN
2041-1723
Sponsor
INSF [90004064]

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