420 research outputs found
Height fluctuations of a contact line: a direct measurement of the renormalized disorder correlator
We have measured the center-of-mass fluctuations of the height of a contact
line at depinning for two different systems: liquid hydrogen on a rough cesium
substrate and isopropanol on a silicon wafer grafted with silanized patches.
The contact line is subject to a confining quadratic well, provided by gravity.
From the second cumulant of the height fluctuations, we measure the
renormalized disorder correlator Delta(u), predicted by the Functional RG
theory to attain a fixed point, as soon as the capillary length is large
compared to the Larkin length set by the microscopic disorder. The experiments
are consistent with the asymptotic form for Delta(u) predicted by Functional
RG, including a linear cusp at u=0. The observed small deviations could be used
as a probe of the underlying physical processes. The third moment, as well as
avalanche-size distributions are measured and compared to predictions from
Functional RG.Comment: 6 pages, 14 figure
Distribution of velocities in an avalanche
For a driven elastic object near depinning, we derive from first principles
the distribution of instantaneous velocities in an avalanche. We prove that
above the upper critical dimension, d >= d_uc, the n-times distribution of the
center-of-mass velocity is equivalent to the prediction from the ABBM
stochastic equation. Our method allows to compute space and time dependence
from an instanton equation. We extend the calculation beyond mean field, to
lowest order in epsilon=d_uc-d.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Chaos in the thermal regime for pinned manifolds via functional RG
The statistical correlations of two copies of a d-dimensional elastic
manifold embedded in slightly different frozen disorder are studied using the
Functional Renormalization Group to one-loop accuracy, order O(eps = 4-d).
Determining the initial (short scale) growth of mutual correlations, i.e. chaos
exponents, requires control of a system of coupled differential (FRG) equations
(for the renormalized mutual and self disorder correlators) in a very delicate
boundary layer regime. Some progress is achieved at non-zero temperature, where
linear analysis can be used. A growth exponent a is defined from center of mass
fluctuations in a quadratic potential. In the case where temperature is
marginal, e.g. a periodic manifold in d=2, we demonstrate analytically and
numerically that a = eps (1/3 - 1/(2 log(1/T)) with interesting and unexpected
logarithmic corrections at low T. For short range (random bond) disorder our
analysis indicates that a = 0.083346(6) eps, with large finite size
corrections.Comment: 14 pages, 3 figure
Shock statistics in higher-dimensional Burgers turbulence
We conjecture the exact shock statistics in the inviscid decaying Burgers
equation in D>1 dimensions, with a special class of correlated initial
velocities, which reduce to Brownian for D=1. The prediction is based on a
field-theory argument, and receives support from our numerical calculations. We
find that, along any given direction, shocks sizes and locations are
uncorrelated.Comment: 4 pages, 8 figure
Phase transitions for a collective coordinate coupled to Luttinger liquids
We study various realizations of collective coordinates, e.g. the position of
a particle, the charge of a Coulomb box or the phase of a Bose or a
superconducting condensate, coupled to Luttinger liquids (LL) with N flavors.
We find that for Luttinger parameter 1/2<K<1 there is a phase transition from a
delocalized phase into a phase with a periodic potential at strong coupling. In
the delocalized phase the dynamics is dominated by an effective mass, i.e.
diffusive in imaginary time, while on the transition line it becomes
dissipative. At K=1/2 there is an additional transition into a localized phase
with no diffusion at zero temperature.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, 1 table, Phys. Rev. Lett. (in press
Freezing Transition in Decaying Burgers Turbulence and Random Matrix Dualities
We reveal a phase transition with decreasing viscosity at \nu=\nu_c>0
in one-dimensional decaying Burgers turbulence with a power-law correlated
random profile of Gaussian-distributed initial velocities
\sim|x-x'|^{-2}. The low-viscosity phase exhibits non-Gaussian
one-point probability density of velocities, continuously dependent on \nu,
reflecting a spontaneous one step replica symmetry breaking (RSB) in the
associated statistical mechanics problem. We obtain the low orders cumulants
analytically. Our results, which are checked numerically, are based on
combining insights in the mechanism of the freezing transition in random
logarithmic potentials with an extension of duality relations discovered
recently in Random Matrix Theory. They are essentially non mean-field in nature
as also demonstrated by the shock size distribution computed numerically and
different from the short range correlated Kida model, itself well described by
a mean field one step RSB ansatz. We also provide some insights for the finite
viscosity behaviour of velocities in the latter model.Comment: Published version, essentially restructured & misprints corrected. 6
pages, 5 figure
Avalanches in mean-field models and the Barkhausen noise in spin-glasses
We obtain a general formula for the distribution of sizes of "static
avalanches", or shocks, in generic mean-field glasses with
replica-symmetry-breaking saddle points. For the Sherrington-Kirkpatrick (SK)
spin-glass it yields the density rho(S) of the sizes of magnetization jumps S
along the equilibrium magnetization curve at zero temperature. Continuous
replica-symmetry breaking allows for a power-law behavior rho(S) ~ 1/(S)^tau
with exponent tau=1 for SK, related to the criticality (marginal stability) of
the spin-glass phase. All scales of the ultrametric phase space are implicated
in jump events. Similar results are obtained for the sizes S of static jumps of
pinned elastic systems, or of shocks in Burgers turbulence in large dimension.
In all cases with a one-step solution, rho(S) ~ S exp(-A S^2). A simple
interpretation relating droplets to shocks, and a scaling theory for the
equilibrium analog of Barkhausen noise in finite-dimensional spin glasses are
discussed.Comment: 6 pages, 1 figur
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