4.7 Article

Nonsteady relaxation and critical exponents at the depinning transition

Journal

PHYSICAL REVIEW E
Volume 87, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevE.87.032122

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NVIDIA Academic Partnership Program
  2. CONICET [PIP11220090100051]
  3. [PICT2010-889]

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We study the nonsteady relaxation of a driven one-dimensional elastic interface at the depinning transition by extensive numerical simulations concurrently implemented on graphics processing units. We compute the time-dependent velocity and roughness as the interface relaxes from a flat initial configuration at the thermodynamic random-manifold critical force. Above a first, nonuniversal microscopic time regime, we find a nontrivial long crossover towards the nonsteady macroscopic critical regime. This mesoscopic time regime is robust under changes of the microscopic disorder, including its random-bond or random-field character, and can be fairly described as power-law corrections to the asymptotic scaling forms, yielding the true critical exponents. In order to avoid fitting effective exponents with a systematic bias we implement a practical criterion of consistency and perform large-scale (L similar or equal to 2(25)) simulations for the nonsteady dynamics of the continuum displacement quenched Edwards-Wilkinson equation, getting accurate and consistent depinning exponents for this class: beta = 0.245 +/- 0.006, z = 1.433 +/- 0.007, zeta = 1.250 +/- 0.005, and nu = 1.333 +/- 0.007. Our study may explain numerical discrepancies (as large as 30% for the velocity exponent beta) found in the literature. It might also be relevant for the analysis of experimental protocols with driven interfaces keeping a long-term memory of the initial condition. DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevE.87.032122

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