Ballistic annihilation in one dimension : A critical review
Soham Biswas, Francois Leyvraz

TL;DR
This review examines one-dimensional ballistic annihilation models, analyzing pure and diffusive variants, their decay behaviors, and crossover phenomena, providing a comprehensive overview of reaction annihilation dynamics.
Contribution
It offers a detailed synthesis of ballistic and diffusive annihilation models in one dimension, highlighting decay laws and crossover behaviors not thoroughly covered before.
Findings
Pure ballistic annihilation: concentration decays as t^{-1/2}.
Superimposed diffusion accelerates decay to t^{-3/4}.
Discusses nearest-neighbor distribution and crossover phenomena.
Abstract
In this article we review the problem of reaction annihilation on a real lattice in one dimension, where particles move ballistically in one direction with a discrete set of possible velocities. We first discuss the case of pure ballistic annihilation, that is a model in which each particle moves simultaneously at constant speed. We then review ballistic annihilation with superimposed diffusion in one dimension. This model consists of diffusing particles each of which diffuses with a fixed bias, which can be either positive or negative with probability , and annihilate upon contact. When the initial concentration of left and right moving particles is same, the concentration decays as with time, for pure ballistic annihilation. However when the diffusion is superimposed decay is faster and the concentration . We…
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