Preface
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 September 2012
Summary
Self-organised criticality (SOC) is a very lively field that in recent years has branched out into many different areas and contributed immensely to the understanding of critical phenomena in nature. Since its discovery in 1987, it has been one of the most active and influential fields in statistical mechanics. It has found innumerable applications in a large variety of fields, such as physics, chemistry, medicine, sociology, linguistics, to name but a few. A lot of progress has been made over the last 20 years in understanding the phenomenology of SOC and its causes. During this time, many of the original concepts have been revised a number of times, and some, such as complexity and emergence, are still very actively discussed. Nevertheless, some if not most of the original questions remain unanswered. Is SOC ubiquituous? How does it work?
As the field matured and reached a widening audience, the demand for a summary or a commented review grew. When Professor Henrik J. Jensen asked me to write an updated version of his book on self-organised criticality six years ago, it struck me as a great honour, but an equally great challenge. His book is widely regarded as a wonderfully concise, well-written introduction to the field. After more than 24 years since its conception, self-organised criticality is in a process of consolidation, which an up-todate review has to appreciate just as much as the many new results discovered and the new directions explored.
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- Self-Organised CriticalityTheory, Models and Characterisation, pp. xiii - xviPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2012