150 research outputs found
Quantum bound to chaos and the semiclassical limit
We discuss the quantum bound on chaos in the context of the free propagation
of a particle in an arbitrarily curved surface at low temperatures. The
semiclassical calculation of the Lyapunov exponent can be performed in much the
same way as the corresponding one for the `Loschmidt echo'.The bound appears
here as the impossibility to scatter a wave, by effect of the curvature, over
characteristic lengths smaller than the deBroglie wavelength.Comment: References added, some typos correcte
Supersymmetry, replica and dynamic treatments of disordered systems: a parallel presentation
I briefly review the three nonperturbative methods for the treatment of
disordered systems -- supersymmetry, replicas and dynamics -- with a parallel
presentation that highlights their connections and differences.Comment: Proceedings of the Inhomogeneous Random Systems, Cergy 2002; to
appear in Journal of Markov Processes and Related Field
Statistical mechanics of Monte Carlo sampling and the sign problem
Monte Carlo sampling of any system may be analyzed in terms of an associated
glass model -- a variant of the Random Energy Model -- with, whenever there is
a sign problem, complex fields. This model has three types of phases (liquid,
frozen and `chaotic'), as is characteristic of glass models with complex
parameters. Only the liquid one yields the correct answers for the original
problem, and the task is to design the simulation to stay inside it. The
statistical convergence of the sampling to the correct expectation values may
be studied in these terms, yielding a general lower bound for the computer time
as a function of the free energy difference between the true system, and a
reference one. In this way, importance-sampling strategies may be optimized
Nonequilibrium glass transitions in driven and active matter
The glass transition, extensively studied in dense fluids, polymers, or
colloids, corresponds to a dramatic evolution of equilibrium transport
coefficients upon a modest change of control parameter, like temperature or
pressure. A similar phenomenology is found in many systems evolving far from
equilibrium, such as driven granular media, active and living matter. While
many theories compete to describe the glass transition at thermal equilibrium,
very little is understood far from equilibrium. Here, we solve the dynamics of
a specific, yet representative, class of glass models in the presence of
nonthermal driving forces and energy dissipation, and show that a dynamic
arrest can take place in these nonequilibrium conditions. While the location of
the transition depends on the specifics of the driving mechanisms, important
features of the glassy dynamics are insensitive to details, suggesting that an
`effective' thermal dynamics generically emerges at long time scales in
nonequilibrium systems close to dynamic arrest.Comment: 7 pages, 2 fig
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