Correlations in interacting systems with a network topology
arXiv:cond-mat/0506002 · doi:10.1103/PhysRevE.72.066130
Abstract
We study pair correlations in cooperative systems placed on complex networks. We show that usually in these systems, the correlations between two interacting objects (e.g., spins), separated by a distance $\ell$, decay, on average, faster than $1/(\ell z_\ell)$. Here $z_\ell$ is the mean number of the $\ell$-th nearest neighbors of a vertex in a network. This behavior, in particular, leads to a dramatic weakening of correlations between second and more distant neighbors on networks with fat-tailed degree distributions, which have a divergent number $z_2$ in the infinite network limit. In this case, only the pair correlations between the nearest neighbors are observable. We obtain the pair correlation function of the Ising model on a complex network and also derive our results in the framework of a phenomenological approach.
5 pages