| Literature DB >> 31624122 |
Dongli Duan1,2, Changchun Lv1, Shubin Si3, Zhen Wang3,4, Daqing Li5, Jianxi Gao6,7, Shlomo Havlin8, H Eugene Stanley9, Stefano Boccaletti10,11.
Abstract
Catastrophic and major disasters in real-world systems, such as blackouts in power grids or global failures in critical infrastructures, are often triggered by minor events which originate a cascading failure in interdependent graphs. We present here a self-consistent theory enabling the systematic analysis of cascading failures in such networks and encompassing a broad range of dynamical systems, from epidemic spreading, to birth-death processes, to biochemical and regulatory dynamics. We offer testable predictions on breakdown scenarios, and, in particular, we unveil the conditions under which the percolation transition is of the first-order or the second-order type, as well as prove that accounting for dynamics in the nodes always accelerates the cascading process. Besides applying directly to relevant real-world situations, our results give practical hints on how to engineer more robust networked systems.Keywords: cascading failure; interdependent network; robustness; spreading
Year: 2019 PMID: 31624122 PMCID: PMC6842597 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1904421116
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205