A theory for the nonlinear energy response of a system subjected to a heat
bath is developed when the temperature of the heat bath is modulated
sinusoidally. The theory is applied to a model glass forming system, where the
landscape is assumed to have 20 basins and transition rates between basins obey
a power law distribution. It is shown that the statistics of eigenvalues of the
transition rate matrix, the glass transition temperature Tg, the
Vogel-Fulcher temperature T0 and the crossover temperature Tx can be
determined from the 1st- and 2nd-order ac specific heats, which are defined as
coefficients of the 1st- and 2nd-order energy responses. The imaginary part of
the 1st-order ac specific heat has a broad peak corresponding to the
distribution of the eigenvalues. When the temperature is decreased below Tg,
the frequency of the peak decreases and the width increases. Furthermore, the
statistics of eigenvalues can be obtained from the frequency dependence of the
1st-order ac specific heat. The 2nd-order ac specific heat shows extrema as a
function of the frequency. The extrema diverge at the Vogel-Fulcher temperature
T0. The temperature dependence of the extrema changes significantly near
Tg and some extrema vanish near Tx.Comment: 20 pages, 10 figure