Phase Transitions

Front Cover
Princeton University Press, Aug 14, 2011 - Mathematics - 223 pages

Phase transitions--changes between different states of organization in a complex system--have long helped to explain physics concepts, such as why water freezes into a solid or boils to become a gas. How might phase transitions shed light on important problems in biological and ecological complex systems? Exploring the origins and implications of sudden changes in nature and society, Phase Transitions examines different dynamical behaviors in a broad range of complex systems. Using a compelling set of examples, from gene networks and ant colonies to human language and the degradation of diverse ecosystems, the book illustrates the power of simple models to reveal how phase transitions occur.


Introductory chapters provide the critical concepts and the simplest mathematical techniques required to study phase transitions. In a series of example-driven chapters, Ricard Solé shows how such concepts and techniques can be applied to the analysis and prediction of complex system behavior, including the origins of life, viral replication, epidemics, language evolution, and the emergence and breakdown of societies.


Written at an undergraduate mathematical level, this book provides the essential theoretical tools and foundations required to develop basic models to explain collective phase transitions for a wide variety of ecosystems.

 

Contents

1 Phase Changes
1
2 Stability and Instability
25
3 Bifurcations and Catastrophes
37
4 Percolation
53
5 Random Graphs
63
6 Life Origins
70
7 Virus Dynamics
78
8 Cell Structure
91
11 Cancer Dynamics
120
12 Ecological Shifts
134
13 Information and Traffic Jams
148
14 Collective Intelligence
157
15 Language
167
16 Social Collapse
179
References
189
Index
213

9 Epidemic Spreading
99
10 Gene Networks
109

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