Phys. Rev. B 66, 024430 (2002) [11 pages]Crackling noise, power spectra, and disorder-induced critical scaling |
A. Travesset, R. A. White, and K. A. Dahmen
Loomis Laboratory, University of Illinois at Urbana, Urbana, Illinois 61801
Received 14 December 2001; revised 30 April 2002; published 19 July 2002
Crackling noise is observed in many disordered nonequilibrium systems in response to slowly changing external conditions. Examples range from Barkhausen noise in magnets to acoustic emission in martensites to earthquakes. Using the nonequilibrium random-field Ising model, we derive universal scaling predictions for the dependence of the associated power spectra on the disorder and field sweep rate, near an underlying disorder-induced nonequilibrium critical point. Our theory applies to certain systems in which the crackling noise results from an avalanchelike response to a (slowly) increasing external driving force, and is characterized by a broad power-law scaling regime of the power spectra. We compute the critical exponents and discuss the relevance of the results to experiments.
©2002 The American Physical Society
URL: http://link.aps.org/abstract/PRB/v66/e024430
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevB.66.024430
PACS: 75.60.-d, 75.60.Ej, 75.60.Ch
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