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The effect of geometry in the statistics of textit{nonlinear} universality classes for interface growth has been widely investigated in recent years and it is well known to yield a split of them into subclasses. In this work, we investigate this for the textit{linear} classes of Edwards-Wilkinson (EW) and of Mullins-Herring (MH) in one- and two-dimensions. From comparison of analytical results with extensive numerical simulations of several discrete models belonging to these classes, as well as numerical integrations of the growth equations on substrates of fixed size (flat geometry) or expanding linearly in time (radial geometry), we verify that the height distributions (HDs), the spatial and the temporal covariances are universal, but geometry-dependent. In fact, the HDs are always Gaussian and, when defined in terms of the so-called KPZ ansatz $[h simeq v_{infty} t + (Gamma t)^{beta} chi]$, their probability density functions $P(chi)$ have mean null, so that all their cumulants are null, except by their variances, which assume different values in the flat and radial cases. The shape of the (rescaled) covariance curves is analyzed in detail and compared with some existing analytical results for them. Overall, these results demonstrate that the splitting of such university classes is quite general, being not restricted to the nonlinear ones.
A stochastic partial differential equation along the lines of the Kardar-Parisi-Zhang equation is introduced for the evolution of a growing interface in a radial geometry. Regular polygon solutions as well as radially symmetric solutions are identifi
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