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Universality classes in nonequilibrium lattice systems

. Reviews of Modern Physics, 76 (3): 663--724 (August 2004)
DOI: 10.1103/revmodphys.76.663

Abstract

This article reviews our present knowledge of universality classes in nonequilibrium systems defined on regular lattices. The first section presents the most important critical exponents and relations, as well as the field-theoretical formalism used in the text. The second section briefly addresses the question of scaling behavior at first-order phase transitions. In Sec. 3 the author looks at dynamical extensions of basic static classes, showing the effects of mixing dynamics and of percolation. The main body of the review begins in Sec. 4, where genuine, dynamical universality classes specific to nonequilibrium systems are introduced. Section 5 considers such nonequilibrium classes in coupled, multicomponent systems. Most of the known nonequilibrium transition classes are explored in low dimensions between active and absorbing states of reaction-diffusion-type systems. However, by mapping they can be related to the universal behavior of interface growth models, which are treated in Sec. 6. The review ends with a summary of the classes of absorbing-state and mean-field systems and discusses some possible directions for future research.

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