658 research outputs found
Stability of the Mezard-Parisi solution for random manifolds
The eigenvalues of the Hessian associated with random manifolds are
constructed for the general case of steps of replica symmetry breaking. For
the Parisi limit (continuum replica symmetry breaking) which is
relevant for the manifold dimension , they are shown to be non negative.Comment: LaTeX, 15 page
Replica Fourier Transforms on Ultrametric Trees, and Block-Diagonalizing Multi-Replica Matrices
The analysis of objects living on ultrametric trees, in particular the
block-diagonalization of 4-replica matrices ,
is shown to be dramatically simplified through the introduction of properly
chosen operations on those objects. These are the Replica Fourier Transforms on
ultrametric trees. Those transformations are defined and used in the present
work.Comment: Latex file, 14 page
Two-particle renormalizations in many-fermion perturbation theory: Importance of the Ward identity
We analyze two-particle renormalizations within many-fermion perturbation
expansion. We show that present diagrammatic theories suffer from lack of a
direct diagrammatic control over the physical two-particle functions. To
rectify this we introduce and prove a Ward identity enabling an explicit
construction of the self-energy from a given two-particle irreducible vertex.
Approximations constructed in this way are causal, obey conservation laws and
offer an explicit diagrammatic control of singularities in dynamical
two-particle functions.Comment: REVTeX4, 4 pages, 2 EPS figure
Spontaneous versus explicit replica symmetry breaking in the theory of disordered systems
We investigate the relation between spontaneous and explicit replica symmetry
breaking in the theory of disordered systems. On general ground, we prove the
equivalence between the replicon operator associated with the stability of the
replica symmetric solution in the standard replica scheme and the operator
signaling a breakdown of the solution with analytic field dependence in a
scheme in which replica symmetry is explicitly broken by applied sources. This
opens the possibility to study, via the recently developed functional
renormalization group, unresolved questions related to spontaneous replica
symmetry breaking and spin-glass behavior in finite-dimensional disordered
systems.Comment: 16 page
Interaction Flip Identities for non Centered Spin Glasses
We consider spin glass models with non-centered interactions and investigate
the effect, on the random free energies, of flipping the interaction in a
subregion of the entire volume. A fluctuation bound obtained by martingale
methods produces, with the help of integration by parts technique, a family of
polynomial identities involving overlaps and magnetizations
Finite dimensional corrections to mean field in a short-range p-spin glassy model
In this work we discuss a short range version of the -spin model. The
model is provided with a parameter that allows to control the crossover with
the mean field behaviour. We detect a discrepancy between the perturbative
approach and numerical simulation. We attribute it to non-perturbative effects
due to the finite probability that each particular realization of the disorder
allows for the formation of regions where the system is less frustrated and
locally freezes at a higher temperature.Comment: 18 pages, 5 figures, submitted to Phys Rev
Mean field and corrections for the Euclidean Minimum Matching problem
Consider the length of the minimum matching of N points in
d-dimensional Euclidean space. Using numerical simulations and the finite size
scaling law , we obtain
precise estimates of for . We then consider
the approximation where distance correlations are neglected. This model is
solvable and gives at an excellent ``random link'' approximation to
. Incorporation of three-link correlations further improves
the accuracy, leading to a relative error of 0.4% at d=2 and 3. Finally, the
large d behavior of this expansion in link correlations is discussed.Comment: source and one figure. Submitted to PR
Universality classes in anisotropic non-equilibrium growth models
We study the effect of generic spatial anisotropies on the scaling behavior
in the Kardar-Parisi-Zhang equation. In contrast to its "conserved" variants,
anisotropic perturbations are found to be relevant in d > 2 dimensions, leading
to rich phenomena that include novel universality classes and the possibility
of first-order phase transitions and multicritical behavior. These results
question the presumed scaling universality in the strong-coupling rough phase,
and shed further light on the connection with generalized driven diffusive
systems.Comment: 4 pages, revtex, 2 figures (eps files enclosed
The Complexity of Ising Spin Glasses
We compute the complexity (logarithm of the number of TAP states) associated
with minima and index-one saddle points of the TAP free energy. Higher-index
saddles have smaller complexities. The two leading complexities are equal,
consistent with the Morse theorem on the total number of turning points, and
have the value given in [A. J. Bray and M. A. Moore, J. Phys. C 13, L469
(1980)]. In the thermodynamic limit, TAP states of all free energies become
marginally stable.Comment: Typos correcte
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