In this paper we continue the study of a topological glassy system. The state
space of the model is given by all triangulations of a sphere with N nodes,
half of which are red and half are blue. Red nodes want to have 5 neighbors
while blue ones want 7. Energies of nodes with other numbers of neighbors are
supposed to be positive. The dynamics is that of flipping the diagonal between
two adjacent triangles, with a temperature dependent probability. We consider
the system at very low temperatures.
We concentrate on several new aspects of this model: Starting from a detailed
description of the stationary state, we conclude that pairs of defects (nodes
with the "wrong" degree) move with very high mobility along 1-dimensional
paths. As they wander around, they encounter single defects, which they then
move "sideways" with a geometrically defined probability. This induces a
diffusive motion of the single defects. If they meet, they annihilate, lowering
the energy of the system. We both estimate the decay of energy to equilibrium,
as well as the correlations. In particular, we find a decay like t−0.4