Experimental Proof for the Theory of Interdependent Networks: Novel Physical Phase Transitions

Seminar
QUEST Center event
No
Speaker
Shlomo Havlin (BIU)
Date
19/06/2023 - 12:00 - 10:30Add to Calendar 2023-06-19 10:30:00 2023-06-19 12:00:00 Experimental Proof for the Theory of Interdependent Networks: Novel Physical Phase Transitions A theoretical framework for the percolation of interdependent networks will be presented. In interdependent networks, such as infrastructures, when nodes in one network fail, they cause dependent nodes in other networks to also fail. This may happen recursively and can lead to a cascade of failures and to a sudden fragmentation of the system. This is in contrast to a single network where the percolation transition due to failures is continuous.  I will present analytical solutions based on percolation theory, for the functional network and cascading failures, for a network of n interdependent networks. Our analytical results show that the percolation theory of a single network studied for over 80 years is just a limited case, n=1, of the general and a significantly richer case of n>1. I will also show that interdependent networks embedded in space are significantly more vulnerable and have significantly richer behavior compared to non-embedded networks. In particular, it will be shown that localized attacks of zero fraction but above a microscopic critical size lead to cascading failures that dynamically propagate like nucleation and yield an abrupt phase transition.  I will finally show that the abstract interdependent percolation theory and its novel behavior in networks of networks can be realized and proven in controlled experiments performed by Aviad Frydman on real physical systems.  I will present recent experiments that support the interdependent network theory in measurements of interdependent superconducting networks where a novel abrupt transition is observed due to microscopic interactions between the macroscopic systems although each isolated system shows a continuous transition. References S. Buldyrev, G. Paul, H.E. Stanley, S. Havlin, Nature, 464, 08932 (2010) J. Gao, S. Buldyrev, H. E. Stanley, S. Havlin, Nature Physics, 8, 40 (2012) A. Bashan et al, Nature Physics, 9, 667 (2013) A Majdandzic et al, Nature Physics 10 (1), 34 (2014); Nature Comm. 7, 10850 (2016) M. Danziger et al, Nature Physics  15(2), 178 (2019) B. Gross et al, PRL  129, 268301 (2022) I. Bonamassa, B. Gross, A  Frydman et al, Interdependent superconducting networks, Nature Physics (May 1, 2023) Physics (#202), room 301 המחלקה לפיזיקה physics.dept@mail.biu.ac.il Asia/Jerusalem public
Place
Physics (#202), room 301
Abstract

A theoretical framework for the percolation of interdependent networks will be presented. In interdependent networks, such as infrastructures, when nodes in one network fail, they cause dependent nodes in other networks to also fail. This may happen recursively and can lead to a cascade of failures and to a sudden fragmentation of the system. This is in contrast to a single network where the percolation transition due to failures is continuous.  I will present analytical solutions based on percolation theory, for the functional network and cascading failures, for a network of n interdependent networks. Our analytical results show that the percolation theory of a single network studied for over 80 years is just a limited case, n=1, of the general and a significantly richer case of n>1. I will also show that interdependent networks embedded in space are significantly more vulnerable and have significantly richer behavior compared to non-embedded networks. In particular, it will be shown that localized attacks of zero fraction but above a microscopic critical size lead to cascading failures that dynamically propagate like nucleation and yield an abrupt phase transition.  I will finally show that the abstract interdependent percolation theory and its novel behavior in networks of networks can be realized and proven in controlled experiments performed by Aviad Frydman on real physical systems.  I will present recent experiments that support the interdependent network theory in measurements of interdependent superconducting networks where a novel abrupt transition is observed due to microscopic interactions between the macroscopic systems although each isolated system shows a continuous transition.

References
S. Buldyrev, G. Paul, H.E. Stanley, S. Havlin, Nature, 464, 08932 (2010)
J. Gao, S. Buldyrev, H. E. Stanley, S. Havlin, Nature Physics, 8, 40 (2012)
A. Bashan et al, Nature Physics, 9, 667 (2013)
A Majdandzic et al, Nature Physics 10 (1), 34 (2014); Nature Comm. 7, 10850 (2016)
M. Danziger et al, Nature Physics  15(2), 178 (2019)
B. Gross et al, PRL  129, 268301 (2022)
I. Bonamassa, B. Gross, A  Frydman et al, Interdependent superconducting networks, Nature Physics (May 1, 2023)

תאריך עדכון אחרון : 05/06/2023