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Phys. Rev. E 72, 056120 (2005) [18 pages]

Three mechanisms for power laws on the Cayley tree

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Ted Brookings and J. M. Carlson
Department of Physics, University of California, Santa Barbara, California 93106, USA

John Doyle
Control and Dynamical Systems, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, California 91125, USA

Received 5 August 2005; published 16 November 2005

We compare preferential growth, critical phase transitions, and highly optimized tolerance (HOT) as mechanisms for generating power laws in the familiar and analytically tractable context of lattice percolation and forest fire models on the Cayley tree. All three mechanisms have been widely discussed in the context of complexity in natural and technological systems. This parallel study enables direct comparison of the mechanisms and associated lattice solutions. Criticality fits most naturally into the category of random processes, where power laws are a consequence of fluctuations in an ensemble with no intrinsic scale. The power laws in preferential growth can be understood in the context of competing exponential growth and decay processes. HOT generalizes this functional mechanism involving exponentials of exponentials to a broader class of nonexponential functions, which arise from optimization.

© 2005 The American Physical Society

URL:
http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevE.72.056120
DOI:
10.1103/PhysRevE.72.056120
PACS:
89.75.−k, 05.50.+q, 64.60.Ak