180 research outputs found

    Effect of weak disorder in the Fully Frustrated XY model

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    The critical behaviour of the Fully Frustrated XY model in presence of weak positional disorder is studied in a square lattice by Monte Carlo methods. The critical exponent associated to the divergence of the chiral correlation length is found to be equal to 1.7 already at very small values of disorder. Furthermore the helicity modulus jump is found larger than the universal value expected in the XY model.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures (revtex

    Spin glasses without time-reversal symmetry and the absence of a genuine structural glass transition

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    We study the three-spin model and the Ising spin glass in a field using Migdal-Kadanoff approximation. The flows of the couplings and fields indicate no phase transition, but they show even for the three-spin model a slow crossover to the asymptotic high-temperature behaviour for strong values of the couplings. We also evaluated a quantity that is a measure of the degree of non-self-averaging, and we found that it can become large for certain ranges of the parameters and the system sizes. For the spin glass in a field the maximum of non-self-averaging follows for given system size a line that resembles the de Almeida-Thouless line. We conclude that non-self-averaging found in Monte-Carlo simulations cannot be taken as evidence for the existence of a low-temperature phase with replica-symmetry breaking. Models similar to the three-spin model have been extensively discussed in order to provide a description of structural glasses. Their theory at mean-field level resembles the mode-coupling theory of real glasses. At that level the one-step replica symmetry approach breaking predicts two transitions, the first transition being dynamical and the second thermodynamical. Our results suggest that in real finite dimensional glasses there will be no genuine transitions at all, but that some features of mean-field theory could still provide some useful insights.Comment: 11 pages, 11 figure

    The influence of critical behavior on the spin glass phase

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    We have argued in recent papers that Monte Carlo results for the equilibrium properties of the Edwards-Anderson spin glass in three dimensions, which had been interpreted earlier as providing evidence for replica symmetry breaking, can be explained quite simply within the droplet model once finite size effects and proximity to the critical point are taken into account. In this paper, we show that similar considerations are sufficient to explain the Monte Carlo data in four dimensions. In particular, we study the Parisi overlap and the link overlap for the four-dimensional Ising spin glass in the Migdal-Kadanoff approximation. Similar to what is seen in three dimensions, we find that temperatures well below those studied in Monte Carlo simulations have to be reached before the droplet model predictions become apparent. We also show that the double-peak structure of the link overlap distribution function is related to the difference between domain-wall excitations that cross the entire system and droplet excitations that are confined to a smaller region.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figure

    Study of Chirality in the Two-Dimensional XY Spin Glass

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    We study the chirality in the Villain form of the XY spin glass in two--dimensions by Monte Carlo simulations. We calculate the chiral-glass correlation length exponent νCG\nu_{\scriptscriptstyle CG} and find that νCG=1.8±0.3\nu_{\scriptscriptstyle CG} = 1.8 \pm 0.3 in reasonable agreement with earlier studies. This indicates that the chiral and phase variables are decoupled on long length scales and diverge as T0T \to 0 with {\em different} exponents, since the spin-glass correlation length exponent was found, in earlier studies, to be about 1.0.Comment: 4 pages. Latex file and 4 embedded postscript files are included in a self-unpacking compressed tar file. A postscript version is available at ftp://chopin.ucsc.edu/pub/xysg.p

    Reply to "Comment on Evidence for the droplet picture of spin glasses"

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    Using Monte Carlo simulations (MCS) and the Migdal-Kadanoff approximation (MKA), Marinari et al. study in their comment on our paper the link overlap between two replicas of a three-dimensional Ising spin glass in the presence of a coupling between the replicas. They claim that the results of the MCS indicate replica symmetry breaking (RSB), while those of the MKA are trivial, and that moderate size lattices display the true low temperature behavior. Here we show that these claims are incorrect, and that the results of MCS and MKA both can be explained within the droplet picture.Comment: 1 page, 1 figur

    Simulation Studies on the Stability of the Vortex-Glass Order

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    The stability of the three-dimensional vortex-glass order in random type-II superconductors with point disorder is investigated by equilibrium Monte Carlo simulations based on a lattice XY model with a uniform field threading the system. It is found that the vortex-glass order, which stably exists in the absence of screening, is destroyed by the screenng effect, corroborating the previous finding based on the spatially isotropic gauge-glass model. Estimated critical exponents, however, deviate considerably from the values reported for the gauge-glass model.Comment: Minor modifications made, a few referenced added; to appear in J. Phys. Soc. Jpn. Vol.69 No.1 (2000

    Current-voltage scaling of chiral and gauge-glass models of two-dimensional superconductors

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    The scaling behavior of the current-voltage characteristics of chiral and gauge glass models of disordered superconductors, are studied numerically, in two dimensions. For both models, the linear resistance is nonzero at finite temperatures and the scaling analysis of the nonlinear resistivity is consistent with a phase transition at T=0 temperature characterized by a diverging correlation length ξTνT\xi \propto T^{-\nu_{T}} and thermal critical exponent νT\nu_{T}. The values of νT\nu_{T}, however, are found to be different for the chiral and gauge glass models, suggesting different universality classes, in contrast to the result obtained recently in three dimensions.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures (included), to appear in Phys. Rev.

    A conjectured scenario for order-parameter fluctuations in spin glasses

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    We study order-parameter fluctuations (OPF) in disordered systems by considering the behavior of some recently introduced paramaters G,GcG,G_c which have proven very useful to locate phase transitions. We prove that both parameters G (for disconnected overlap disorder averages) and GcG_c (for connected disorder averages) take the respective universal values 1/3 and 13/31 in the T0T\to 0 limit for any {\em finite} volume provided the ground state is {\em unique} and there is no gap in the ground state local-field distributions, conditions which are met in generic spin-glass models with continuous couplings and no gap at zero coupling. This makes G,GcG,G_c ideal parameters to locate phase transitions in disordered systems much alike the Binder cumulant is for ordered systems. We check our results by exactly computing OPF in a simple example of uncoupled spins in the presence of random fields and the one-dimensional Ising spin glass. At finite temperatures, we discuss in which conditions the value 1/3 for G may be recovered by conjecturing different scenarios depending on whether OPF are finite or vanish in the infinite-volume limit. In particular, we discuss replica equivalence and its natural consequence limVG(V,T)=1/3\lim_{V\to\infty}G(V,T)=1/3 when OPF are finite. As an example of a model where OPF vanish and replica equivalence does not give information about G we study the Sherrington-Kirkpatrick spherical spin-glass model by doing numerical simulations for small sizes. Again we find results compatible with G=1/3 in the spin-glass phase.Comment: 18 pages, 9 postscript figure

    Ordering of the Heisenberg spin glass in two dimensions

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    The spin and the chirality orderings of the Heisenberg spin glass in two dimensions with the nearest-neighbor Gaussian coupling are investigated by equilibrium Monte Carlo simulations. Particular attention is paid to the behavior of the spin and the chirality correlation lengths. In order to observe the true asymptotic behavior, fairly large system size L\gsim 20 (L the linear dimension of the system) appears to be necessary. It is found that both the spin and the chirality order only at zero temperature. At high temperatures, the chiral correlation length stays shorter than spin correlation length, whereas at lower temperatures below the crossover temperature T_\times, the chiral correlation length exceeds the spin correlation length. The spin and the chirality correlation-length exponents are estimated above T_\times to be \nu_SG=0.9+-0.2 and \nu_CG=2.1+-0.3, respectively. These values are close to the previous estimates on the basis of the domain-wall-energy calculation. Discussion is given about the asymptotic critical behavior realized below T_\times.Comment: to appear in a special issue of J. Phys.

    Nature of the vortex-glass order in strongly type-II superconductors

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    The stability and the critical properties of the three-dimensional vortex-glass order in random type-II superconductors with point disorder is investigated in the unscreened limit based on a lattice {\it XY} model with a uniform field. By performing equilibrium Monte Carlo simulations for the system with periodic boundary conditions, the existence of a stable vortex-glass order is established in the unscreened limit. Estimated critical exponents are compared with those of the gauge-glass model.Comment: Error in the reported value of the exponent eta is correcte
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