Self-organization without conservation: true or just apparent scale-invariance?
Juan A. Bonachela, Miguel A. Munoz

TL;DR
This paper critically examines whether non-conserving models of self-organized criticality truly exhibit scale-invariance, demonstrating that such apparent criticality requires fine-tuning and is not genuine criticality, unlike conserving systems.
Contribution
It provides a unified framework analyzing non-conserving self-organized criticality, clarifying the mechanisms behind apparent criticality and introducing the concept of self-organized quasi-criticality (SOqC).
Findings
Non-conserving systems require fine-tuning to achieve criticality.
Apparent criticality in non-conserving systems is not genuine criticality.
A unified theoretical approach explains differences between conserving and non-conserving models.
Abstract
The existence of true scale-invariance in slowly driven models of self-organized criticality without a conservation law, as forest-fires or earthquake automata, is scrutinized in this paper. By using three different levels of description - (i) a simple mean field, (ii) a more detailed mean-field description in terms of a (self-organized) branching processes, and (iii) a full stochastic representation in terms of a Langevin equation-, it is shown on general grounds that non-conserving dynamics does not lead to bona fide criticality. Contrarily to conserving systems, a parameter, which we term "re-charging" rate (e.g. the tree-growth rate in forest-fire models), needs to be fine-tuned in non-conserving systems to obtain criticality. In the infinite size limit, such a fine-tuning of the loading rate is easy to achieve, as it emerges by imposing a second separation of time-scales but, for…
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