doctoralThesis
Estudo da transição de fase da percolação através da entropia da informação
Fecha
2015-12-21Registro en:
VIEIRA, Tiago de Medeiros. Estudo da transição de fase da percolação através da entropia da informação. 2015. 70f. Tese (Doutorado em Física) - Centro de Ciências Exatas e da Terra, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Norte, Natal, 2015.
Autor
Vieira, Tiago de Medeiros
Resumen
Various physical systems have dynamics that can be modeled by percolation processes.
Percolation is used to study issues ranging from fluid diffusion through disordered media to
fragmentation of a computer network caused by hacker attacks. A common feature of all of
these systems is the presence of two non-coexistent regimes associated to certain properties
of the system. For example: the disordered media can allow or not allow the flow of the fluid
depending on its porosity. The change from one regime to another characterizes the percolation
phase transition. The standard way of analyzing this transition uses the order parameter,
a variable related to some characteristic of the system that exhibits zero value in one of the
regimes and a nonzero value in the other. The proposal introduced in this thesis is that this
phase transition can be investigated without the explicit use of the order parameter, but rather
through the Shannon entropy. This entropy is a measure of the uncertainty degree in the information
content of a probability distribution. The proposal is evaluated in the context of cluster
formation in random graphs, and we apply the method to both classical percolation (Erd¨os-
R´enyi) and explosive percolation. It is based in the computation of the entropy contained in
the cluster size probability distribution and the results show that the transition critical point
relates to the derivatives of the entropy. Furthermore, the difference between the smooth and
abrupt aspects of the classical and explosive percolation transitions, respectively, is reinforced
by the observation that the entropy has a maximum value in the classical transition critical
point, while that correspondence does not occurs during the explosive percolation.