3,488 research outputs found
The Stability of the Replica Symmetric State in Finite Dimensional Spin Glasses
According to the droplet picture of spin glasses, the low-temperature phase
of spin glasses should be replica symmetric. However, analysis of the stability
of this state suggested that it was unstable and this instability lends support
to the Parisi replica symmetry breaking picture of spin glasses. The
finite-size scaling functions in the critical region of spin glasses below T_c
in dimensions greater than 6 can be determined and for them the replica
symmetric solution is unstable order by order in perturbation theory.
Nevertheless the exact solution can be shown to be replica-symmetric. It is
suggested that a similar mechanism might apply in the low-temperature phase of
spin glasses in less than six dimensions, but that a replica symmetry broken
state might exist in more than six dimensions.Comment: 5 pages. Modified to include a paragraph on the relation of this work
to that of Newman and Stei
Is the droplet theory for the Ising spin glass inconsistent with replica field theory?
Symmetry arguments are used to derive a set of exact identities between
irreducible vertex functions for the replica symmetric field theory of the
Ising spin glass in zero magnetic field. Their range of applicability spans
from mean field to short ranged systems in physical dimensions. The replica
symmetric theory is unstable for d>8, just like in mean field theory. For 6<d<8
and d<6 the resummation of an infinite number of terms is necessary to settle
the problem. When d<8, these Ward-like identities must be used to distinguish
an Almeida-Thouless line from the replica symmetric droplet phase.Comment: 4 pages. Accepted for publication in J.Phys.A. This is the accepted
version with the following minor changes: one extra sentence in the abstract;
footnote 2 slightly extended; last paragraph somewhat reformulate
Phase Ordering Kinetics with External Fields and Biased Initial Conditions
The late-time phase-ordering kinetics of the O(n) model for a non-conserved
order parameter are considered for the case where the O(n) symmetry is broken
by the initial conditions or by an external field. An approximate theoretical
approach, based on a `gaussian closure' scheme, is developed, and results are
obtained for the time-dependence of the mean order parameter, the pair
correlation function, the autocorrelation function, and the density of
topological defects [e.g. domain walls (), or vortices ()]. The
results are in qualitative agreement with experiments on nematic films and
related numerical simulations on the two-dimensional XY model with biased
initial conditions.Comment: 35 pages, latex, no figure
Dynamics of Ordering of Heisenberg Spins with Torque --- Nonconserved Case. I
We study the dynamics of ordering of a nonconserved Heisenberg magnet. The
dynamics consists of two parts --- an irreversible dissipation into a heat bath
and a reversible precession induced by a torque due to the local molecular
field. For quenches to zero temperature, we provide convincing arguments, both
numerically (Langevin simulation) and analytically (approximate closure scheme
due to Mazenko), that the torque is irrelevant at late times. We subject the
Mazenko closure scheme to systematic numerical tests. Such an analysis, carried
out for the first time on a vector order parameter, shows that the closure
scheme performs respectably well. For quenches to , we show, to , that the torque is irrelevant at the Wilson-Fisher fixed
point.Comment: 13 pages, REVTEX, and 19 .eps figures, compressed, Submitted to Phys.
Rev.
Coarsening and Pinning in the Self-consistent Solution of Polymer Blends Phase-Separation Kinetics
We study analytically a continuum model for phase-separation in binary
polymer blends based on the Flory-Huggins-De Gennes free energy, by means of
the self-consistent large- limit approach. The model is solved for values of
the parameters corresponding to the weak and strong segregation limits. For
deep quenches we identify a complex structure of intermediate regimes and
crossovers characterized by the existence of a time domain such that phase
separation is pinned, followed by a preasymptotic regime which in the scalar
case corresponds to surface diffusion. The duration of the pinning is
analytically computed and diverges in the strong segregation limit. Eventually
a late stage dynamics sets in, described by scaling laws and exponents
analogous to those of the corresponding small molecule systems.Comment: 16 pages, 5 figures. Submitted to Phys. Rev.
Identification of the critical temperature from non-equilibrium time-dependent quantities
We present a new procedure able to identify and measure the critical
temperature. This method is based on the divergence of the relaxation time
approaching the critical point in quenches from infinite temperature. We
introduce a dimensionless quantity that turns out to be time-independent at the
critical temperature. The procedure does not need equilibration and allows for
a relatively fast identification of the critical temperature. The method is
first tested in the ferromagnetic Ising model and then applied to the
one-dimensional Ising spin glass with power-law interactions. Here we always
find a finite critical temperature also in presence of a uniform external
field, in agreement with the mean-field picture for the low temperature phase
of spin glasses.Comment: 6 pages, 10 figure
Phase Ordering Kinetics of One-Dimensional Non-Conserved Scalar Systems
We consider the phase-ordering kinetics of one-dimensional scalar systems.
For attractive long-range () interactions with ,
``Energy-Scaling'' arguments predict a growth-law of the average domain size for all . Numerical results for ,
, and demonstrate both scaling and the predicted growth laws. For
purely short-range interactions, an approach of Nagai and Kawasaki is
asymptotically exact. For this case, the equal-time correlations scale, but the
time-derivative correlations break scaling. The short-range solution also
applies to systems with long-range interactions when , and in that limit the amplitude of the growth law is exactly
calculated.Comment: 19 pages, RevTex 3.0, 8 FIGURES UPON REQUEST, 1549
The critical exponents of the two-dimensional Ising spin glass revisited: Exact Ground State Calculations and Monte Carlo Simulations
The critical exponents for of the two-dimensional Ising spin glass
model with Gaussian couplings are determined with the help of exact ground
states for system sizes up to and by a Monte Carlo study of a
pseudo-ferromagnetic order parameter. We obtain: for the stiffness exponent
, for the magnetic exponent
and for the chaos exponent . From Monte Carlo simulations we
get the thermal exponent . The scaling prediction is
fulfilled within the error bars, whereas there is a disagreement with the
relation .Comment: 8 pages RevTeX, 7 eps-figures include
Coarsening and persistence in a class of stochastic processes interpolating between the Ising and voter models
We study the dynamics of a class of two dimensional stochastic processes,
depending on two parameters, which may be interpreted as two different
temperatures, respectively associated to interfacial and to bulk noise. Special
lines in the plane of parameters correspond to the Ising model, voter model and
majority vote model. The dynamics of this class of models may be described
formally in terms of reaction diffusion processes for a set of coalescing,
annihilating, and branching random walkers. We use the freedom allowed by the
space of parameters to measure, by numerical simulations, the persistence
probability of a generic model in the low temperature phase, where the system
coarsens. This probability is found to decay at large times as a power law with
a seemingly constant exponent . We also discuss the
connection between persistence and the nature of the interfaces between
domains.Comment: Late
Replica field theory and renormalization group for the Ising spin glass in an external magnetic field
We use the generic replica symmetric cubic field-theory to study the
transition of short range Ising spin glasses in a magnetic field around the
upper critical dimension, d=6. A novel fixed-point is found, in addition to the
well-known zero magnetic field fixed-point, from the application of the
renormalization group. In the spin glass limit, n going to 0, this fixed-point
governs the critical behaviour of a class of systems characterised by a single
cubic interaction parameter. For this universality class, the spin glass
susceptibility diverges at criticality, whereas the longitudinal mode remains
massive. The third mode, the so-called anomalous one, however, behaves
unusually, having a jump at criticality. The physical consequences of this
unusual behaviour are discussed, and a comparison with the conventional de
Almeida-Thouless scenario presented.Comment: 5 pages written in revtex4. Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
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