The Spatial Shape of Avalanches
Zhaoxuan Zhu, Kay Jörg Wiese
CNRS-Laboratoire de Physique Théorique de 
l'Ecole Normale Supérieure, PSL Research University, Sorbonne Universités, UPMC, 
24 rue Lhomond, 75005 Paris, France.
Abstract
In  disordered elastic systems,   driven by displacing a parabolic confining potential adiabatically slowly, all advance of the system is in bursts, termed avalanches. Avalanches have a finite extension in time, which is much smaller than the waiting-time between them. 
 Avalanches also have a finite extension $\ell$ in space, i.e. only a part of the interface of size $\ell$ moves during an avalanche. Here we study their spatial shape $\left< S(x)\right>_{\ell}$ given     $\ell$, as well as  its fluctuations encoded in the second  cumulant $\left< S^{2}(x)\right>_{\ell}^{{\rm c}}$. We establish  scaling relations governing the behavior close to the boundary.  
 We then give analytic results for the Brownian force model, in which the microscopic disorder for each degree of freedom is a random walk. Finally, we confirm these results with numerical simulations. To do this properly
 we elucidate the influence of discretization  effects, which also confirms the assumptions entering into the scaling ansatz. This allows us to  reach the scaling limit already  for avalanches of moderate size.
 We find excellent agreement for the  universal shape, its fluctuations, including all  amplitudes. 
 
 
arXiv:1708.01078 [pdf]
Phys. Rev. E 96 (2017) 062116 [pdf]
	
 Copyright (C) 
by Kay Wiese.  Last edited January 9, 2018.