Pattern Formation in Interface Depinning and Other Models: Erratically Moving Spatial Structures
Supriya Krishnamurthy, Mustansir Barma

TL;DR
This paper investigates erratically moving spatial structures in driven interfaces at the depinning threshold, introducing a bond-disordered Sneppen model and analyzing pattern formation through simulations and integral equations.
Contribution
It presents a new bond-disordered Sneppen model and develops an approximate integral equation to understand activity-centered pattern formation in extremal models.
Findings
Patterns have power-law decaying tails.
Activity-centered patterns influence correlation functions.
Pattern formation is generic in extremal models.
Abstract
We study erratically moving spatial structures that are found in a driven interface in a random medium at the depinning threshold. We introduce a bond-disordered variant of the Sneppen model and study the effect of extremal dynamics on the morphology of the interface. We find evidence for the formation of a structure which moves along with the growth site. The time average of the structure, which is defined with respect to the active spot of growth, defines an activity-centered pattern. Extensive Monte Carlo simulations show that the pattern has a tail which decays slowly, as a power law. To understand this sort of pattern formation, we write down an approximate integral equation involving the local interface dynamics and long-ranged jumps of the growth spot. We clarify the nature of the approximation by considering a model for which the integral equation is exactly derivable from an…
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