The fluctuation-dissipation relation (FDR) is measured on the dielectric
properties of a polymer glass (polycarbonate)in the range 20mHz−100Hz. It
is found that after a quench below the glass transition temperature the
fluctuation dissipation theorem is strongly violated. The amplitude and the
persistence time of this violation are decreasing functions of frequency. At
frequencies larger than 1Hz it persists for about 3h. The origin of this
violation is a highly intermittent dynamics characterized by large
fluctuations. The relevance of these results for recent models of aging
dynamics are discussed.Comment: to be published in Europhysics Letter