Activated Random Walkers: Facts, Conjectures and Challenges
Ronald Dickman, Leonardo T. Rolla, Vladas Sidoravicius

TL;DR
This paper investigates the phase transition and critical behavior of activated random walkers on integer lattices, combining theoretical analysis and simulations to understand activity persistence and absorption phenomena.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the phase transition between active and absorbing states, characterizes critical exponents, and links the symmetric case to conserved directed percolation universality class.
Findings
Phase transition is continuous in both symmetric and asymmetric cases.
Critical exponents are simple rational numbers, e.g., β=1.
Symmetric case belongs to conserved directed percolation class.
Abstract
We study a particle system with hopping (random walk) dynamics on the integer lattice . The particles can exist in two states, active or inactive (sleeping); only the former can hop. The dynamics conserves the number of particles; there is no limit on the number of particles at a given site. Isolated active particles fall asleep at rate , and then remain asleep until joined by another particle at the same site. The state in which all particles are inactive is absorbing. Whether activity continues at long times depends on the relation between the particle density and the sleeping rate . We discuss the general case, and then, for the one-dimensional totally asymmetric case, study the phase transition between an active phase (for sufficiently large particle densities and/or small ) and an absorbing one. We also present arguments regarding…
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