Continuously variable spreading exponents in the absorbing Nagel-Schreckenberg model
Abstract
I study the critical behavior of a traffic model with an absorbing state. The model is a variant of the Nagel-Schreckenberg (NS) model, in which drivers do not decelerate if their speed is smaller than their headway, the number of empty sites between them and the car ahead. This makes the free-flow state (i.e., all vehicles traveling at the maximum speed, vmax, and with all headways greater than vmax) absorbing; such states are possible for for densities rho smaller than a critical value rhoc = 1/(vmax + 2). Drivers with nonzero velocity, and with headway equal to velocity, decelerate with probability p. This absorbing Nagel-Schreckenberg (ANS) model, introduced in [Phys. Rev. E 95, 022106 (2017)], exhibits a line of continuous absorbing-state phase transitions in the rho-p plane. Here I study the propagation of activity from a localized seed, and find that the active cluster is compact, as is the active region at long times, starting from uniformly distributed activity. The critical exponents delta (governing the decay of the survival probability) and eta (governing the growth of activity) vary continuously along the critical line. The exponents satisfy a hyperscaling relation associated with compact growth.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.