Many real systems such as, roads, shipping routes, and infrastructure systems can be modeled based on spatially embedded networks. The inter-links between two distant spatial networks, such as those formed by transcontinental airline flights, play a crucial role in optimizing communication and transportation over such long distances. Still, little is known about how inter-links affect the structural resilience of such systems. Here, we develop a framework to study the structural resilience of interlinked spatially embedded networks based on percolation theory. We find that the inter-links can be regarded as an external field near the percolation phase transition, analogous to a magnetic field in a ferromagnetic-paramagnetic spin system. By defining the analogous critical exponents δ and γ, we find that their values for various inter-links structures follow Widom's scaling relations. Furthermore, we study the optimal robustness of our model and compare it with the analysis of real-world networks. The framework presented here not only facilitates the understanding of phase transitions with external fields in complex networks but also provides insight into optimizing real-world infrastructure networks.
CITATION STYLE
Fan, J., Dong, G., Shekhtman, L. M., Zhou, D., Meng, J., Chen, X., & Havlin, S. (2018). Structural resilience of spatial networks with inter-links behaving as an external field. New Journal of Physics, 20(9). https://doi.org/10.1088/1367-2630/aadceb
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