Scaling of negative moments of the growth probability of diffusion-limited aggregates
- 1 January 1990
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physical Society (APS) in Physical Review A
- Vol. 41 (2) , 971-982
- https://doi.org/10.1103/physreva.41.971
Abstract
The qth moment M(q) of the growth probability of diffusion-limited aggregates is studied for q<0 in terms of the value [M(q,N obtained by averaging M(q) over the ensemble of all aggregates of a given number of particles N. For a range of structures that are susceptible to precise analysis, we verify that all moments, even those for q<0, obey asymptotic power-law scaling in N. Since we cannot analyze completely arbitrary structures, our analysis is not definitive. However, it does suggest the validity of a recent proposal by one of us that there is no Lifshitz-like anomaly (similar to that found for the distribution of currents in the random resistor network) leading to non-power-law scaling of the negative moments of the growth probability.
Keywords
This publication has 27 references indexed in Scilit:
- Off-lattice and hypercubic-lattice models for diffusion-limited aggregation in dimensionalities 2–8Physical Review A, 1989
- Scaling properties for the surfaces of fractal and nonfractal objects: An infinite hierarchy of critical exponentsPhysical Review A, 1986
- Universality, nonuniversality, and the effects of anisotropy on diffusion-limited aggregationPhysical Review A, 1986
- Quasicontinuum variants of diffusion-limited aggregationPhysical Review A, 1986
- The structure of two-dimensional Witten-Sander aggregatesJournal of Physics A: General Physics, 1985
- Diffusion-limited aggregationPhysical Review B, 1983
- Mean-Field Theory for Diffusion-Limited Cluster FormationPhysical Review Letters, 1983
- Diffusion-controlled cluster formation in 2—6-dimensional spacePhysical Review A, 1983
- Diffusion-controlled cluster formation in two, three, and four dimensionsPhysical Review A, 1983
- Diffusion-Limited Aggregation, a Kinetic Critical PhenomenonPhysical Review Letters, 1981