Author

Contributions

  • Pleimling, Michel - Contributor
  • SpringerLink (Online service) - Contributor

Publication

2010 - Springer Science+Business Media B.V., Dordrecht, Netherlands

Language

English

Word Count

0 words, Guess

Page Count

0 pages

Physical Format

Electronic resource

Identifiers

and 7 more
  • ISBN-109048128692
  • Library of Congress Control Number2010927415
  • Library of Congress Control Number2008929635
  • OCLC Control Number305138316
  • Better World Books9789048128686
  • Better World Books9789048128693
  • Open LibraryOL25559328M

Classifications

  • LCCQC175.16.P5 H46 2008
  • LCCQC19.2-20.85QC173.45
  • LCCQC19.2-20.85
and 1 more
  • LCCQC175.16.P5 H46 2010

Description

This book is Volume 2 of a two-volume set describing two main classes of non-equilibrium phase-transitions. This volume covers dynamical scaling in far-from-equilibrium relaxation behaviour and ageing. Motivated initially by experimental results, dynamical scaling has now been recognised as a cornerstone in the modern understanding of far from equilibrium relaxation. Dynamical scaling is systematically introduced, starting from coarsening phenomena, and existing analytical results and numerical estimates of universal non-equilibrium exponents and scaling functions are reviewed in detail. Ageing phenomena in glasses, as well as in simple magnets, are paradigmatic examples of non-equilibrium dynamical scaling, but may also be found in irreversible systems of chemical reactions. Recent theoretical work sought to understand if dynamical scaling may be just a part of a larger symmetry, called local scale-invariance. Initially, this was motivated by certain analogies with the conformal invariance of equilibrium phase transitions; this work has recently reached a degree of completion and the research is presented, systematically and in detail, in book form for the first time. Numerous worked-out exercises are included. Quite similar ideas apply to the phase transitions of equilibrium systems with competing interactions and interesting physical realisations, for example in Lifshitz points.

Subjects

Series Statement

  • Theoretical and Mathematical Physics

Links

Reader Reviews

No reviews yet for this book.

Be the first to share your thoughts!