580 research outputs found
Configurational entropy of hard spheres
We numerically calculate the configurational entropy S_conf of a binary
mixture of hard spheres, by using a perturbed Hamiltonian method trapping the
system inside a given state, which requires less assumptions than the previous
methods [R.J. Speedy, Mol. Phys. 95, 169 (1998)]. We find that S_conf is a
decreasing function of packing fraction f and extrapolates to zero at the
Kauzmann packing fraction f_K = 0.62, suggesting the possibility of an ideal
glass-transition for hard spheres system. Finally, the Adam-Gibbs relation is
found to hold.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figure
Random field Ising-like effective theory of the glass transition II: finite-dimensional models
As in the preceding paper Phys. Rev. B 98, 174205 (2018)10.1103/PhysRevB.98.174205, hereafter referred to as Paper I we aim at identifying the effective theory that describes the fluctuations of the local overlap with an equilibrium reference configuration close to a putative thermodynamic glass transition. We focus here on the case of finite-dimensional glass-forming systems, in particular supercooled liquids. The main difficulty for going beyond the mean-field treatment comes from the presence of diverging point-to-set spatial correlations. We introduce a variational low-temperature approximation scheme that allows us to account, at least in part, for the effect of these correlations. The outcome is an effective theory for the overlap fluctuations in terms of a random-field + random-bond Ising model with additional, power-law decaying, pair and multibody interactions generated by the point-to-set correlations. This theory is much more tractable than the original problem. We check the robustness of the approximation scheme by applying it to a fully connected model already studied in Paper I. We discuss the physical implications of this mapping for glass-forming liquids and the possibility it offers to determine the presence or not of a finite-temperature thermodynamic glass transition
Random-field Ising-like effective theory of the glass transition. I Mean-field models
In this paper, we address the problem of identifying the effective theory that describes the statistics of the fluctuations of what is thought to be the relevant order parameter for glassy systems - the overlap field with an equilibrium reference configuration - close to the putative thermodynamic glass transition. Our starting point is the mean-field theory of glass formation, which relies on the existence of a complex free-energy landscape with a multitude of metastable states. In this paper, we focus on archetypal mean-field models possessing this type of free-energy landscape and set up the framework to determine the exact effective theory. We show that the effective theory at the mean-field level is generically of the random-field + random-bond Ising type. We also discuss the main issues concerning the extension of our result to finite-dimensional systems. This extension is addressed in detail in the companion paper
Absence of a structural glass phase in a monoatomic model liquid predicted to undergo an ideal glass transition
We study numerically a monodisperse model of interacting classical particles
predicted to exhibit a static liquid-glass transition. Using a dynamical Monte
Carlo method we show that the model does not freeze into a glassy phase at low
temperatures. Instead, depending on the choice of the hard-core radius for the
particles the system either collapses trivially or a polycrystalline hexagonal
structure emerges.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, minor changes in introduction and conclusions,
additional reference
N-Acylethanolamine Acid Amidase (NAAA): Structure, Function, and Inhibition
N-Acylethanolamine acid amidase (NAAA) is an N-terminal cysteine hydrolase primarily found in the endosomal-lysosomal compartment of innate and adaptive immune cells. NAAA catalyzes the hydrolytic deactivation of palmitoylethanolamide (PEA), a lipid-derived peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-α (PPAR-α) agonist that exerts profound anti-inflammatory effects in animal models. Emerging evidence points to NAAA-regulated PEA signaling at PPAR-α as a critical control point for the induction and the resolution of inflammation and to NAAA itself as a target for anti-inflammatory medicines. The present Perspective discusses three key aspects of this hypothesis: the role of NAAA in controlling the signaling activity of PEA; the structural bases for NAAA function and inhibition by covalent and noncovalent agents; and finally, the potential value of NAAA-targeting drugs in the treatment of human inflammatory disorders
The Valence Bond Glass phase
We show that a new glassy phase can emerge in presence of strong magnetic
frustration and quantum fluctuations. It is a Valence Bond Glass. We study its
properties solving the Hubbard-Heisenberg model on a Bethe lattice within the
large limit introduced by Affleck and Marston. We work out the phase
diagram that contains Fermi liquid, dimer and valence bond glass phases. This
new glassy phase has no electronic or spin gap (although a pseudo-gap is
observed), it is characterized by long-range critical valence bond correlations
and is not related to any magnetic ordering. As a consequence it is quite
different from both valence bond crystals and spin glasses
Jamming transition in granular media: A mean field approximation and numerical simulations
In order to study analytically the nature of the jamming transition in
granular material, we have considered a cavity method mean field theory, in the
framework of a statistical mechanics approach, based on Edwards' original idea.
For simplicity we have applied the theory to a lattice model and a transition
with exactly the same nature of the glass transition in mean field models for
usual glass formers is found. The model is also simulated in three dimensions
under tap dynamics and a jamming transition with glassy features is observed.
In particular two step decays appear in the relaxation functions and dynamic
heterogeneities resembling ones usually observed in glassy systems. These
results confirm early speculations about the connection between the jamming
transition in granular media and the glass transition in usual glass formers,
giving moreover a precise interpretation of its nature.Comment: 11 pages, 12 figure
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