We study a process termed agglomerative percolation (AP) in two dimensions. Instead of adding sites or bonds at random, in AP randomly chosen clusters are linked to all their neighbors. As a result the growth process involves a diverging length scale near a critical point. Picking target clusters with probability proportional to their mass leads to a runaway compact cluster. Choosing all clusters equally leads to a continuous transition in a new universality class for the square lattice, while the transition on the triangular lattice has the same critical exponents as ordinary percolation - violating blatantly the basic notion of universality. �� 2012 Europhysics Letters Association
We consider two-dimensional percolation in the scaling limit close to criticality and use integrable...
Percolation theory deals with forming of connected objects inside dis-ordered media. One of the poss...
Employing highly efficient algorithms for simulating invasion percolation (IP), whose execution time...
We study a process termed agglomerative percolation (AP) in two dimensions. Instead of adding sites ...
Percolation theory is a useful tool when modeling the random interconnectivity of the microscopic el...
For ordinary (independent) percolation on a large class of lattices it is well known that below the ...
We report on universality in boundary domain growth in cluster aggregation in the limit of maximum c...
We present an efficient algorithm for simulating percolation transitions of mutually supporting viab...
For ordinary (independent) percolation on a large class of lattices it is well known that below the ...
We consider a type of dependent percolation introduced in [2], where it is shown that certain "enhan...
In a preceding paper, we presented a Monte Carlo method and two branching process models, used for t...
We derive scaling laws for the percolation properties of an elongated lattice, i.e., those with dime...
ABSTRACT. We review some of the recent progress on the scaling limit of two-dimensional critical per...
In this paper, we study the critical behavior of percolation on a configuration model with degree di...
The percolation phase transitions of two-dimensional lattice networks under a generalized Achlioptas...
We consider two-dimensional percolation in the scaling limit close to criticality and use integrable...
Percolation theory deals with forming of connected objects inside dis-ordered media. One of the poss...
Employing highly efficient algorithms for simulating invasion percolation (IP), whose execution time...
We study a process termed agglomerative percolation (AP) in two dimensions. Instead of adding sites ...
Percolation theory is a useful tool when modeling the random interconnectivity of the microscopic el...
For ordinary (independent) percolation on a large class of lattices it is well known that below the ...
We report on universality in boundary domain growth in cluster aggregation in the limit of maximum c...
We present an efficient algorithm for simulating percolation transitions of mutually supporting viab...
For ordinary (independent) percolation on a large class of lattices it is well known that below the ...
We consider a type of dependent percolation introduced in [2], where it is shown that certain "enhan...
In a preceding paper, we presented a Monte Carlo method and two branching process models, used for t...
We derive scaling laws for the percolation properties of an elongated lattice, i.e., those with dime...
ABSTRACT. We review some of the recent progress on the scaling limit of two-dimensional critical per...
In this paper, we study the critical behavior of percolation on a configuration model with degree di...
The percolation phase transitions of two-dimensional lattice networks under a generalized Achlioptas...
We consider two-dimensional percolation in the scaling limit close to criticality and use integrable...
Percolation theory deals with forming of connected objects inside dis-ordered media. One of the poss...
Employing highly efficient algorithms for simulating invasion percolation (IP), whose execution time...