Studies of low-frequency resistance noise show that the glassy freezing of
the two-dimensional electron system (2DES) in Si in the vicinity of the
metal-insulator transition (MIT) persists in parallel magnetic fields B of up
to 9 T. At low B, both the glass transition density ng and nc, the
critical density for the MIT, increase with B such that the width of the
metallic glass phase (nc<ns<ng) increases with B. At higher B, where the
2DES is spin polarized, nc and ng no longer depend on B. Our results
demonstrate that charge, as opposed to spin, degrees of freedom are responsible
for glassy ordering of the 2DES near the MIT.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure