Self-organized criticality: Does it have anything to do with criticality and is it useful?

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Abstract

Three aspects of complexity are fractals, chaos, and self-organized critically. There are many examples of the applicability of fractals in solid-earth geophysics, such as earthquakes and landforms. Chaos is widely accepted as being applicable to a variety of geophysical phenomena, for instance, tectonics and mantle convection. Several simple cellular-automata models have been said to exhibit self-organized critically. Examples include the sandpile, forest fire and slider-blocks models. It is believed that these are directly applicable to landslides, actual forest fires, and earthquakes, respectively. The slider-block model has been shown to clearly exhibit deterministic chaos and fractal behaviour. The concept of self-similar cascades can explain self-organized critical behaviour. This approach also illustrates the similarities and differences with critical phenomena through association with the site-percolation and diffusion-limited aggregation models.

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Turcotte, D. L. (2001). Self-organized criticality: Does it have anything to do with criticality and is it useful? Nonlinear Processes in Geophysics, 8(4–5), 193–196. https://doi.org/10.5194/npg-8-193-2001

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