321 research outputs found

    Statistics of first-passage times in disordered systems using backward master equations and their exact renormalization rules

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    We consider the non-equilibrium dynamics of disordered systems as defined by a master equation involving transition rates between configurations (detailed balance is not assumed). To compute the important dynamical time scales in finite-size systems without simulating the actual time evolution which can be extremely slow, we propose to focus on first-passage times that satisfy 'backward master equations'. Upon the iterative elimination of configurations, we obtain the exact renormalization rules that can be followed numerically. To test this approach, we study the statistics of some first-passage times for two disordered models : (i) for the random walk in a two-dimensional self-affine random potential of Hurst exponent HH, we focus on the first exit time from a square of size L×LL \times L if one starts at the square center. (ii) for the dynamics of the ferromagnetic Sherrington-Kirkpatrick model of NN spins, we consider the first passage time tft_f to zero-magnetization when starting from a fully magnetized configuration. Besides the expected linear growth of the averaged barrier lntfˉN\bar{\ln t_{f}} \sim N, we find that the rescaled distribution of the barrier (lntf)(\ln t_{f}) decays as euηe^{- u^{\eta}} for large uu with a tail exponent of order η1.72\eta \simeq 1.72. This value can be simply interpreted in terms of rare events if the sample-to-sample fluctuation exponent for the barrier is ψwidth=1/3\psi_{width}=1/3.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figure

    Duality symmetries and effective dynamics in disordered hopping models

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    We identify a duality transformation in one-dimensional hopping models that relates propagators in general disordered potentials linked by an up-down inversion of the energy landscape. This significantly generalises previous results for a duality between trap and barrier models. We use the resulting insights into the symmetries of these models to develop a real-space renormalisation scheme that can be implemented computationally and allows rather accurate prediction of propagation in these models. We also discuss the relation of this renormalisation scheme to earlier analytical treatments.Comment: 29 pages, 7 figs. Final version, some extra context and references adde

    Anomalous diffusion in disordered multi-channel systems

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    We study diffusion of a particle in a system composed of K parallel channels, where the transition rates within the channels are quenched random variables whereas the inter-channel transition rate v is homogeneous. A variant of the strong disorder renormalization group method and Monte Carlo simulations are used. Generally, we observe anomalous diffusion, where the average distance travelled by the particle, []_{av}, has a power-law time-dependence []_{av} ~ t^{\mu_K(v)}, with a diffusion exponent 0 \le \mu_K(v) \le 1. In the presence of left-right symmetry of the distribution of random rates, the recurrent point of the multi-channel system is independent of K, and the diffusion exponent is found to increase with K and decrease with v. In the absence of this symmetry, the recurrent point may be shifted with K and the current can be reversed by varying the lane change rate v.Comment: 16 pages, 7 figure

    Phases of random antiferromagnetic spin-1 chains

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    We formulate a real-space renormalization scheme that allows the study of the effects of bond randomness in the Heisenberg antiferromagnetic spin-1 chain. There are four types of bonds that appear during the renormalization flow. We implement numerically the decimation procedure. We give a detailed study of the probability distributions of all these bonds in the phases that occur when the strength of the disorder is varied. Approximate flow equations are obtained in the weak-disorder regime as well as in the strong disorder case where the physics is that of the random singlet phase.Comment: 29 pages, 12 encapsulated Postscript figures, REVTeX 3.

    Localization Properties in One Dimensional Disordered Supersymmetric Quantum Mechanics

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    A model of localization based on the Witten Hamiltonian of supersymmetric quantum mechanics is considered. The case where the superpotential ϕ(x)\phi(x) is a random telegraph process is solved exactly. Both the localization length and the density of states are obtained analytically. A detailed study of the low energy behaviour is presented. Analytical and numerical results are presented in the case where the intervals over which ϕ(x)\phi(x) is kept constant are distributed according to a broad distribution. Various applications of this model are considered.Comment: 43 pages, plain TEX, 8 figures not included, available upon request from the Authors

    Probing the tails of the ground state energy distribution for the directed polymer in a random medium of dimension d=1,2,3d=1,2,3 via a Monte-Carlo procedure in the disorder

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    In order to probe with high precision the tails of the ground-state energy distribution of disordered spin systems, K\"orner, Katzgraber and Hartmann \cite{Ko_Ka_Ha} have recently proposed an importance-sampling Monte-Carlo Markov chain in the disorder. In this paper, we combine their Monte-Carlo procedure in the disorder with exact transfer matrix calculations in each sample to measure the negative tail of ground state energy distribution Pd(E0)P_d(E_0) for the directed polymer in a random medium of dimension d=1,2,3d=1,2,3. In d=1d=1, we check the validity of the algorithm by a direct comparison with the exact result, namely the Tracy-Widom distribution. In dimensions d=2d=2 and d=3d=3, we measure the negative tail up to ten standard deviations, which correspond to probabilities of order Pd(E0)1022P_d(E_0) \sim 10^{-22}. Our results are in agreement with Zhang's argument, stating that the negative tail exponent η(d)\eta(d) of the asymptotic behavior lnPd(E0)E0η(d)\ln P_d (E_0) \sim - | E_0 |^{\eta(d)} as E0E_0 \to -\infty is directly related to the fluctuation exponent θ(d)\theta(d) (which governs the fluctuations ΔE0(L)Lθ(d)\Delta E_0(L) \sim L^{\theta(d)} of the ground state energy E0E_0 for polymers of length LL) via the simple formula η(d)=1/(1θ(d))\eta(d)=1/(1-\theta(d)). Along the paper, we comment on the similarities and differences with spin-glasses.Comment: 13 pages, 16 figure

    Random elastic networks : strong disorder renormalization approach

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    For arbitrary networks of random masses connected by random springs, we define a general strong disorder real-space renormalization (RG) approach that generalizes the procedures introduced previously by Hastings [Phys. Rev. Lett. 90, 148702 (2003)] and by Amir, Oreg and Imry [Phys. Rev. Lett. 105, 070601 (2010)] respectively. The principle is to eliminate iteratively the elementary oscillating mode of highest frequency associated with either a mass or a spring constant. To explain the accuracy of the strong disorder RG rules, we compare with the Aoki RG rules that are exact at fixed frequency.Comment: 8 pages, v2=final versio

    Smoothening of Depinning Transitions for Directed Polymers with Quenched Disorder

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    We consider disordered models of pinning of directed polymers on a defect line, including (1+1)-dimensional interface wetting models, disordered Poland--Scheraga models of DNA denaturation and other (1+d)-dimensional polymers in interaction with columnar defects. We consider also random copolymers at a selective interface. These models are known to have a (de)pinning transition at some critical line in the phase diagram. In this work we prove that, as soon as disorder is present, the transition is at least of second order: the free energy is differentiable at the critical line, and the order parameter (contact fraction) vanishes continuously at the transition. On the other hand, it is known that the corresponding non-disordered models can have a first order (de)pinning transition, with a jump in the order parameter. Our results confirm predictions based on the Harris criterion.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure. Version 2: references added, minor changes made. To appear on Phys. Rev. Let

    Anderson localization transition with long-ranged hoppings : analysis of the strong multifractality regime in terms of weighted Levy sums

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    For Anderson tight-binding models in dimension dd with random on-site energies ϵr\epsilon_{\vec r} and critical long-ranged hoppings decaying typically as Vtyp(r)V/rdV^{typ}(r) \sim V/r^d, we show that the strong multifractality regime corresponding to small VV can be studied via the standard perturbation theory for eigenvectors in quantum mechanics. The Inverse Participation Ratios Yq(L)Y_q(L), which are the order parameters of Anderson transitions, can be written in terms of weighted L\'evy sums of broadly distributed variables (as a consequence of the presence of on-site random energies in the denominators of the perturbation theory). We compute at leading order the typical and disorder-averaged multifractal spectra τtyp(q)\tau_{typ}(q) and τav(q)\tau_{av}(q) as a function of qq. For q<1/2q<1/2, we obtain the non-vanishing limiting spectrum τtyp(q)=τav(q)=d(2q1)\tau_{typ}(q)=\tau_{av}(q)=d(2q-1) as V0+V \to 0^+. For q>1/2q>1/2, this method yields the same disorder-averaged spectrum τav(q)\tau_{av}(q) of order O(V)O(V) as obtained previously via the Levitov renormalization method by Mirlin and Evers [Phys. Rev. B 62, 7920 (2000)]. In addition, it allows to compute explicitly the typical spectrum, also of order O(V)O(V), but with a different qq-dependence τtyp(q)τav(q)\tau_{typ}(q) \ne \tau_{av}(q) for all q>qc=1/2q>q_c=1/2. As a consequence, we find that the corresponding singularity spectra ftyp(α)f_{typ}(\alpha) and fav(α)f_{av}(\alpha) differ even in the positive region f>0f>0, and vanish at different values α+typ>α+av\alpha_+^{typ} > \alpha_+^{av}, in contrast to the standard picture. We also obtain that the saddle value αtyp(q)\alpha_{typ}(q) of the Legendre transform reaches the termination point α+typ\alpha_+^{typ} where ftyp(α+typ)=0f_{typ}(\alpha_+^{typ})=0 only in the limit q+q \to +\infty.Comment: 13 pages, 2 figures, v2=final versio

    Permutation-Symmetric Multicritical Points in Random Antiferromagnetic Spin Chains

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    The low-energy properties of a system at a critical point may have additional symmetries not present in the microscopic Hamiltonian. This letter presents the theory of a class of multicritical points that provide an interesting example of this in the phase diagrams of random antiferromagnetic spin chains. One case provides an analytic theory of the quantum critical point in the random spin-3/2 chain, studied in recent work by Refael, Kehrein and Fisher (cond-mat/0111295).Comment: Revtex, 4 pages (2 column format), 2 eps figure
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