Coercivity Landscape Characterizes Dynamic Hysteresis
Pith reviewed 2026-05-22 00:30 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Coercivity in a driven stochastic φ⁴ model shows four sequential regimes: linear rise, a stable plateau, square-root rise, and abrupt collapse as driving rate increases.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
For large systems with small noise strength σ, the coercivity H_c ≡ H(⟨φ⟩=0) sequentially exhibits distinct behaviors with increasing driving rate v_H: v_H-scaling increase, stable plateau (v_H^0), v_H^{1/2}-scaling increase, and abrupt decline to disappearance. The plateau reflects the competition between thermodynamic and quasi-static limits, namely lim_{σ→0} lim_{v_H→0} H_c = 0 and lim_{v_H→0} lim_{σ→0} H_c = H^*, where H^* is exactly the field-driven first-order phase transition point. In the post-plateau regime, (H_c - H_P) scales with (v_H - v_P)^{2/3} with v_P and H_P the reference points of the plateau. Finite-size scaling for the plateau is obtained as v_P ∼ σ² and (H^* - H_P) ∼ σ^{
What carries the argument
Coercivity H_c defined as the external field value at which the spatially averaged order parameter ⟨φ⟩ equals zero, together with its dependence on the periodic-drive rate v_H and the noise strength σ.
If this is right
- Dynamic hysteresis acquires a universal sequence of scaling regimes separated by a plateau whose location is set by the competition of limits.
- The post-plateau relation (H_c - H_P) ∝ (v_H - v_P)^{2/3} supplies a concrete, testable scaling law near the transition.
- Renormalization-group analysis yields explicit finite-size scaling v_P ∼ σ² and (H^* - H_P) ∼ σ^{4/3} that predict how the plateau moves when system size or noise changes.
- The abrupt collapse of coercivity at high drive rates marks the point where the system can no longer follow the external field.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- The same non-commuting-limits mechanism may appear in other periodically driven systems that possess a first-order transition, such as driven colloidal suspensions or magnetic multilayers.
- Varying temperature (which controls noise) and drive frequency in an experiment could map out the four-regime landscape directly.
- The plateau height could serve as a practical indicator of the underlying static transition field when true quasi-static conditions are experimentally inaccessible.
- Extending the renormalization-group treatment to other non-equilibrium transitions might reveal analogous finite-size corrections to dynamic thresholds.
Load-bearing premise
The two limits of vanishing noise and vanishing drive rate do not commute in a manner that is physically realized, and the limiting field H^* exactly coincides with the static first-order transition point.
What would settle it
Plot coercivity versus drive rate for successively smaller noise strengths in a large but finite system; check whether a flat plateau appears whose height approaches the known static transition field H^* as noise is reduced.
Figures
read the original abstract
Hysteresis, with rich dynamical behaviors-especially in interacting systems-has drawn broad research interest. Yet its dynamic scalings across time scales lack a unified description, and their transitions remain unclear. Here, we study the stochastic $\phi^4$ model driven periodically by an external field $H$. For large systems with small noise strength $\sigma$, we find the coercivity $H_c \equiv H(\langle\phi\rangle=0)$ sequentially exhibits distinct behaviors with increasing driving rate $v_H$: $v_H$-scaling increase, stable plateau ($v_H^0$), $v_H^{1/2}$-scaling increase, and abrupt decline to disappearance. The plateau reflects the competition between thermodynamic and quasi-static limits, namely, $\lim_{\sigma\to 0}\lim_{v_H\to 0}H_c = 0$, and $\lim_{v_H\to 0}\lim_{\sigma\to 0}H_c=H^*$. Here, $H^*$ is exactly the field-driven first-order phase transition point. In the post-plateau regime, $(H_{c} - H_{P})$ scales with $(v_{H} - v_{P})^{2/3}$ with $v_{P}$ and $H_{P}$ being the reference points of the plateau. Moreover, we reveal a finite-size scaling for the coercivity plateau as $v_{P}\sim\sigma^{2}$ and $(H^*-H_P)\sim\sigma^{4/3}$ by utilizing renormalization-group theory. Our work provides a panoramic view of finite-time scalings of the hysteresis and offers new insights into finite-time/finite-size effect interplay in non-equilibrium systems.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript studies dynamic hysteresis in the periodically driven stochastic φ⁴ model. For large systems and small noise strength σ, it reports that coercivity H_c ≡ H(⟨φ⟩=0) exhibits four sequential regimes with increasing driving rate v_H: v_H-scaling increase, a stable v_H^0 plateau, v_H^{1/2}-scaling increase, and abrupt decline to disappearance. The plateau is attributed to non-commuting limits lim_{σ→0} lim_{v_H→0} H_c = 0 and lim_{v_H→0} lim_{σ→0} H_c = H*, where H* is the field-driven first-order phase transition point. It further reports the post-plateau scaling (H_c − H_P) ∼ (v_H − v_P)^{2/3} and renormalization-group finite-size scalings v_P ∼ σ² and (H* − H_P) ∼ σ^{4/3}.
Significance. If the reported regimes, non-commutativity argument, and scalings are rigorously supported by derivations and independent checks, the work would supply a unified description of finite-time hysteresis scalings and useful insights into the interplay of finite-time and finite-size effects in non-equilibrium systems. The explicit use of renormalization-group theory to obtain the finite-size scalings for the plateau boundaries is a constructive element that could yield testable predictions.
major comments (2)
- [Abstract and sections discussing the limits and plateau interpretation] The identification of the plateau height with the deterministic spinodal field H* (the field at which the metastable minimum disappears in the σ=0 limit) is load-bearing for both the non-commutativity explanation and the subsequent (v_H − v_P)^{2/3} scaling. The manuscript supplies no independent computation of this spinodal field—e.g., by solving the deterministic ODE, locating the inflection point of the effective potential, or numerically extrapolating the zero-noise, zero-rate limit—and no direct comparison between that value and the observed plateau H_P. Without this anchor the regime boundaries remain unverified.
- [Section presenting the renormalization-group finite-size analysis] The finite-size scalings v_P ∼ σ² and (H* − H_P) ∼ σ^{4/3} are derived via renormalization-group theory, yet the manuscript does not detail the specific RG flow equations, the relevant fixed point, or the matching procedure used to extract the exponents from the model. These steps are necessary to confirm that the reported powers are not the result of fitting choices.
minor comments (2)
- [Abstract] The abstract states the scalings but omits any mention of simulation details (system sizes, number of noise realizations, integration method). Adding a concise statement on numerical protocol would improve reproducibility.
- [Main text near the plateau discussion] Notation for the plateau reference points (H_P, v_P) is introduced without an explicit definition at first appearance; a short sentence clarifying how they are operationally extracted from the H_c(v_H) curves would aid clarity.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the detailed and constructive report. The comments highlight areas where additional verification and elaboration will strengthen the manuscript. We address each major comment below and will revise the manuscript to incorporate the suggested improvements.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: [Abstract and sections discussing the limits and plateau interpretation] The identification of the plateau height with the deterministic spinodal field H* (the field at which the metastable minimum disappears in the σ=0 limit) is load-bearing for both the non-commutativity explanation and the subsequent (v_H − v_P)^{2/3} scaling. The manuscript supplies no independent computation of this spinodal field—e.g., by solving the deterministic ODE, locating the inflection point of the effective potential, or numerically extrapolating the zero-noise, zero-rate limit—and no direct comparison between that value and the observed plateau H_P. Without this anchor the regime boundaries remain unverified.
Authors: We agree that an explicit, independent computation of the spinodal field H* and a direct numerical comparison to the observed plateau height H_P would provide a stronger anchor for the non-commutativity argument and the regime boundaries. In the revised manuscript we will add a new subsection that computes H* from the deterministic (σ = 0) dynamics—either by integrating the ODE until the metastable minimum disappears or by locating the inflection point of the effective potential—and overlays this value on the simulated H_c(v_H) curves to confirm that the plateau sits at H*. This addition will also allow us to verify the subsequent (v_H − v_P)^{2/3} scaling more rigorously. revision: yes
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Referee: [Section presenting the renormalization-group finite-size analysis] The finite-size scalings v_P ∼ σ² and (H* − H_P) ∼ σ^{4/3} are derived via renormalization-group theory, yet the manuscript does not detail the specific RG flow equations, the relevant fixed point, or the matching procedure used to extract the exponents from the model. These steps are necessary to confirm that the reported powers are not the result of fitting choices.
Authors: We acknowledge that the renormalization-group derivation was presented too concisely. In the revised version we will expand the finite-size scaling section to include (i) the explicit RG flow equations for the stochastic φ⁴ model under periodic driving, (ii) the identification of the relevant fixed point that controls the plateau boundaries, and (iii) the matching procedure that yields the exponents v_P ∼ σ² and (H* − H_P) ∼ σ^{4/3}. These additions will make the origin of the reported powers transparent and eliminate any ambiguity about fitting versus derivation. revision: yes
Circularity Check
No significant circularity in the derivation chain
full rationale
The paper analyzes the stochastic φ⁴ model under periodic driving and reports observed regimes in coercivity H_c versus driving rate v_H, including a plateau whose height is interpreted via non-commuting limits on σ and v_H with H* identified as the deterministic first-order transition point. The post-plateau scaling (H_c - H_P) ~ (v_H - v_P)^{2/3} and the finite-size scalings v_P ~ σ², (H* - H_P) ~ σ^{4/3} are obtained by applying renormalization-group theory to the model. These steps rely on independent theoretical input and model analysis rather than redefining inputs as outputs or reducing predictions to fitted quantities by construction. The derivation chain is therefore self-contained.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (1)
- domain assumption Renormalization-group theory applies directly to the finite-size scaling of the coercivity plateau in the driven stochastic φ⁴ model
Lean theorems connected to this paper
-
IndisputableMonolith/Cost/FunctionalEquation.leanwashburn_uniqueness_aczel unclear?
unclearRelation between the paper passage and the cited Recognition theorem.
We study the stochastic ϕ⁴ model under periodic driving... coercivity H_c ≡ H(⟨ϕ⟩=0) sequentially exhibits distinct behaviors... lim_{σ→0} lim_{v_H→0} H_c = 0 and lim_{v_H→0} lim_{σ→0} H_c = H^* ... (H_c − H_P) scales with (v_H − v_P)^{2/3} ... finite-size scaling ... v_P ∼ σ² and (H^*−H_P)∼σ^{4/3} by utilizing renormalization-group theory.
-
IndisputableMonolith/Foundation/RealityFromDistinction.leanreality_from_one_distinction unclear?
unclearRelation between the paper passage and the cited Recognition theorem.
the free energy density ... f4(ϕ,H)=½a2ϕ²+¼a4ϕ⁴−Hϕ ... Langevin equation ∂ϕ/∂t=−λ∂f4/∂ϕ + ζ(t)
What do these tags mean?
- matches
- The paper's claim is directly supported by a theorem in the formal canon.
- supports
- The theorem supports part of the paper's argument, but the paper may add assumptions or extra steps.
- extends
- The paper goes beyond the formal theorem; the theorem is a base layer rather than the whole result.
- uses
- The paper appears to rely on the theorem as machinery.
- contradicts
- The paper's claim conflicts with a theorem or certificate in the canon.
- unclear
- Pith found a possible connection, but the passage is too broad, indirect, or ambiguous to say the theorem truly supports the claim.
Forward citations
Cited by 1 Pith paper
-
Finite-time and Finite-size scalings of coercivity in dynamic hysteresis
Coercivity landscape in driven stochastic φ⁴ and Curie-Weiss models shows a plateau at v_P with H_P; scalings are H_c ~ v_H below, H_c ~ v_H^{1/2} in fast driving, and H_c - H_P ~ (v_H - v_P)^{2/3} post-plateau, with ...
Reference graph
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