We investigate a classical lattice system with N particles. The potential
energy V of the scalar displacements is chosen as a ϕ4 on-site
potential plus interactions. Its stationary points are solutions of a coupled
set of nonlinear equations. Starting with Aubry's anti-continuum limit it is
easy to establish a one-to-one correspondence between the stationary points of
V and symbolic sequences σ=(σ1,...,σN) with
σn=+,0,−. We prove that this correspondence remains valid for
interactions with a coupling constant ϵ below a critical value
ϵc and that it allows the use of a ''thermodynamic'' formalism to
calculate statistical properties of the so-called ``energy landscape'' of V.
This offers an explanation why topological quantities of V may become
singular, like in phase transitions. Particularly, we find the saddle index
distribution is maximum at a saddle index nsmax=1/3 for all ϵ<ϵc. Furthermore there exists an interval (v∗,vmax) in which the
saddle index ns as function of average energy vˉ is analytical in
vˉ and it vanishes at v∗, above the ground state energy vgs,
whereas the average saddle index nˉs as function of energy v is
highly nontrivial. It can exhibit a singularity at a critical energy vc and
it vanishes at vgs, only. Close to vgs,nˉs(v) exhibits power
law behavior which even holds for noninteracting particles.Comment: 15 pages, 2 figure