Superdiffusion-like behavior in zero-temperature coarsening of the d=3 Ising model
Abstract
One key aspect of coarsening following a quench below the critical temperature is domain growth. For the non-conserved Ising model a power-law growth of domains of like spins with exponent α = 1/2 is predicted. Including recent work, it was not possible to clearly observe this growth law in the special case of a zero-temperature quench in the three-dimensional model. Instead a slower growth with α<1/2 was reported. We attempt to clarify this discrepancy by running large-scale Monte Carlo simulations of lattice sizes up to L=2048 employing an efficient GPU implementation. Indeed, at late times we measure domain sizes compatible with the expected growth law -- but surprisingly, at still later times domains even grow superdiffusively, i.e., with α > 1/2. We argue that this new problem is possibly caused by sponge-like structures emerging at early times.
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