1,346 research outputs found
Thermodynamics of the L\'evy spin glass
We investigate the L\'evy glass, a mean-field spin glass model with power-law
distributed couplings characterized by a divergent second moment. By combining
extensively many small couplings with a spare random backbone of strong bonds
the model is intermediate between the Sherrington-Kirkpatrick and the
Viana-Bray model. A truncated version where couplings smaller than some
threshold \eps are neglected can be studied within the cavity method
developed for spin glasses on locally tree-like random graphs. By performing
the limit \eps\to 0 in a well-defined way we calculate the thermodynamic
functions within replica symmetry and determine the de Almeida-Thouless line in
the presence of an external magnetic field. Contrary to previous findings we
show that there is no replica-symmetric spin glass phase. Moreover we determine
the leading corrections to the ground-state energy within one-step replica
symmetry breaking. The effects due to the breaking of replica symmetry appear
to be small in accordance with the intuitive picture that a few strong bonds
per spin reduce the degree of frustration in the system
Phase space diffusion and low temperature aging
We study the dynamical evolution of a system with a phase space consisting of
configurations with random energies. The dynamics we use is of Glauber type. It
allows for some dynamical evolution ang aging even at very low temperatures,
through the search of configurations with lower energies.Comment: 11 pages latex, 1 ps figure adde
Partition Function Expansion on Region-Graphs and Message-Passing Equations
Disordered and frustrated graphical systems are ubiquitous in physics,
biology, and information science. For models on complete graphs or random
graphs, deep understanding has been achieved through the mean-field replica and
cavity methods. But finite-dimensional `real' systems persist to be very
challenging because of the abundance of short loops and strong local
correlations. A statistical mechanics theory is constructed in this paper for
finite-dimensional models based on the mathematical framework of partition
function expansion and the concept of region-graphs. Rigorous expressions for
the free energy and grand free energy are derived. Message-passing equations on
the region-graph, such as belief-propagation and survey-propagation, are also
derived rigorously.Comment: 10 pages including two figures. New theoretical and numerical results
added. Will be published by JSTAT as a lette
Phase Diagram of a Classical Fluid in a Quenched Random Potential
We consider the phase diagram of a classical fluid in the presence of a
random pinning potential of arbitrary strength. Introducing replicas for
averaging over the quenched disorder, we use the hypernetted chain
approximation to calculate the correlations in the replicated liquid. The
freezing transition of the liquid into a nearly crystalline state is studied
using a density functional approach, and the liquid-to-glass transition is
studied using a phenomenological replica symmetry breaking approach introduced
by Mezard and Parisi. The first-order liquid-to-crystal transition is found to
change to a continuous liquid-to-glass transition as the strength of the
disorder is increased above a threshold value.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, to appear in EuroPhysics Letter
Zero temperature solutions of the Edwards-Anderson model in random Husimi Lattices
We solve the Edwards-Anderson model (EA) in different Husimi lattices. We
show that, at T=0, the structure of the solution space depends on the parity of
the loop sizes. Husimi lattices with odd loop sizes have always a trivial
paramagnetic solution stable under 1RSB perturbations while, in Husimi lattices
with even loop sizes, this solution is absent. The range of stability under
1RSB perturbations of this and other RS solutions is computed analytically
(when possible) or numerically. We compute the free-energy, the complexity and
the ground state energy of different Husimi lattices at the level of the 1RSB
approximation. We also show, when the fraction of ferromagnetic couplings
increases, the existence, first, of a discontinuous transition from a
paramagnetic to a spin glass phase and latter of a continuous transition from a
spin glass to a ferromagnetic phase.Comment: 20 pages, 10 figures (v3: Corrected analysis of transitions. Appendix
proof fixed
Chaos in Glassy Systems from a TAP Perspective
We discuss level crossing of the free-energy of TAP solutions under
variations of external parameters such as magnetic field or temperature in
mean-field spin-glass models that exhibit one-step Replica-Symmetry-Breaking
(1RSB). We study the problem through a generalized complexity that describes
the density of TAP solutions at a given value of the free-energy and a given
value of the extensive quantity conjugate to the external parameter. We show
that variations of the external parameter by any finite amount can induce level
crossing between groups of TAP states whose free-energies are extensively
different. In models with 1RSB, this means strong chaos with respect to the
perturbation. The linear-response induced by extensive level crossing is
self-averaging and its value matches precisely with the disorder-average of the
non self-averaging anomaly computed from the 2nd moment of thermal fluctuations
between low-lying, almost degenerate TAP states. We present an analytical
recipe to compute the generalized complexity and test the scenario on the
spherical multi- spin models under variation of temperature.Comment: 12 pages, 2 figure
Statistics of low energy excitations for the directed polymer in a random medium ()
We consider a directed polymer of length in a random medium of space
dimension . The statistics of low energy excitations as a function of
their size is numerically evaluated. These excitations can be divided into
bulk and boundary excitations, with respective densities
and . We find that both densities follow the scaling
behavior , where is the exponent governing the
energy fluctuations at zero temperature (with the well-known exact value
in one dimension). In the limit , both scaling
functions and behave as , leading to the droplet power law
in the regime . Beyond their common singularity near , the two scaling functions
are very different : whereas decays
monotonically for , the function first decays for
, then grows for , and finally presents a power law
singularity near . The density
of excitations of length accordingly decays as
where
. We obtain , and , suggesting the possible relation
.Comment: 15 pages, 25 figure
The Wandering Exponent of a One-Dimensional Directed Polymer in a Random Potential with Finite Correlation Radius
We consider a one-dimensional directed polymer in a random potential which is
characterized by the Gaussian statistics with the finite size local
correlations. It is shown that the well-known Kardar's solution obtained
originally for a directed polymer with delta-correlated random potential can be
applied for the description of the present system only in the high-temperature
limit. For the low temperature limit we have obtained the new solution which is
described by the one-step replica symmetry breaking. For the mean square
deviation of the directed polymer of the linear size L it provides the usual
scaling with the wandering exponent z = 2/3 and the
temperature-independent prefactor.Comment: 14 pages, Late
Near optimal configurations in mean field disordered systems
We present a general technique to compute how the energy of a configuration
varies as a function of its overlap with the ground state in the case of
optimization problems. Our approach is based on a generalization of the cavity
method to a system interacting with its ground state. With this technique we
study the random matching problem as well as the mean field diluted spin glass.
As a byproduct of this approach we calculate the de Almeida-Thouless transition
line of the spin glass on a fixed connectivity random graph.Comment: 13 pages, 7 figure
Spectra of Euclidean Random Matrices
We study the spectrum of a random matrix, whose elements depend on the
Euclidean distance between points randomly distributed in space. This problem
is widely studied in the context of the Instantaneous Normal Modes of fluids
and is particularly relevant at the glass transition. We introduce a systematic
study of this problem through its representation by a field theory. In this way
we can easily construct a high density expansion, which can be resummed
producing an approximation to the spectrum similar to the Coherent Potential
Approximation for disordered systems.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figure
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