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Finite-size effects in the short-time height distribution of the Kardar-Parisi-Zhang equation

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 Added by Baruch Meerson
 Publication date 2017
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




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We use the optimal fluctuation method to evaluate the short-time probability distribution $mathcal{P}left(H,L,tright)$ of height at a single point, $H=hleft(x=0,tright)$, of the evolving Kardar-Parisi-Zhang (KPZ) interface $hleft(x,tright)$ on a ring of length $2L$. The process starts from a flat interface. At short times typical (small) height fluctuations are unaffected by the KPZ nonlinearity and belong to the Edwards-Wilkinson universality class. The nonlinearity, however, strongly affects the (asymmetric) tails of $mathcal{P}(H)$. At large $L/sqrt{t}$ the faster-decaying tail has a double structure: it is $L$-independent, $-lnmathcal{P}simleft|Hright|^{5/2}/t^{1/2}$, at intermediately large $|H|$, and $L$-dependent, $-lnmathcal{P}sim left|Hright|^{2}L/t$, at very large $|H|$. The transition between these two regimes is sharp and, in the large $L/sqrt{t}$ limit, behaves as a fractional-order phase transition. The transition point $H=H_{c}^{+}$ depends on $L/sqrt{t}$. At small $L/sqrt{t}$, the double structure of the faster tail disappears, and only the very large-$H$ tail, $-lnmathcal{P}sim left|Hright|^{2}L/t$, is observed. The slower-decaying tail does not show any $L$-dependence at large $L/sqrt{t}$, where it coincides with the slower tail of the GOE Tracy-Widom distribution. At small $L/sqrt{t}$ this tail also has a double structure. The transition between the two regimes occurs at a value of height $H=H_{c}^{-}$ which depends on $L/sqrt{t}$. At $L/sqrt{t} to 0$ the transition behaves as a mean-field-like second-order phase transition. At $|H|<|H_c^{-}|$ the slower tail behaves as $-lnmathcal{P}sim left|Hright|^{2}L/t$, whereas at $|H|>|H_c^{-}|$ it coincides with the slower tail of the GOE Tracy-Widom distribution.

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We study atypically large fluctuations of height $H$ in the 1+1-dimensional Kardar-Parisi-Zhang (KPZ) equation at long times $t$, when starting from a droplet initial condition. We derive exact large deviation function of height for $lambda H<0$, where $lambda$ is the nonlinearity coefficient of the KPZ equation. This large deviation function describes a crossover from the Tracy-Widom distribution tail at small $|H|/t$, which scales as $|H|^3/t$, to a different tail at large $|H|/t$, which scales as $|H|^{5/2}/t^{1/2}$. The latter tail exists at all times $t>0$. It was previously obtained in the framework of the optimal fluctuation method. It was also obtained at short times from exact representation of the complete height statistics. The crossover between the two tails, at long times, occurs at $|H|sim t$ as previously conjectured. Our analytical findings are supported by numerical evaluations using exact representation of the complete height statistics.
87 - Sudip Mukherjee 2020
We study the stochastically driven conserved Kardar-Parisi-Zhang (CKPZ) equation with quenched disorders. Short-ranged quenched disorders is found to be a relevant perturbation on the pure CKPZ equation at one dimension, and as a result, a new universality class different from pure CKPZ equation appears to emerge. At higher dimensions, quenched disorder turns out to be ineffective to influence the universal scaling. This results in the asymptotic long wavelength scaling to be given by the linear theory, a scenario identical with the pure CKPZ equation. For sufficiently long-ranged quenched disorders, the universal scaling is impacted by the quenched disorder even at higher dimensions.
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The one-point distribution of the height for the continuum Kardar-Parisi-Zhang (KPZ) equation is determined numerically using the mapping to the directed polymer in a random potential at high temperature. Using an importance sampling approach, the distribution is obtained over a large range of values, down to a probability density as small as $10^{-1000}$ in the tails. The short time behavior is investigated and compared with recent analytical predictions for the large-deviation forms of the probability of rare fluctuations, showing a spectacular agreement with the analytical expressions. The flat and stationary initial conditions are studied in the full space, together with the droplet initial condition in the half-space.
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