L-3: Difference between revisions
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In this equation the noise is multiplicative and not additive as in the previous lecture. However, all KPZ results can be employed today, thanks to the Cole Hopf transformation. | In this equation the noise is multiplicative and not additive as in the previous lecture. However, all KPZ results can be employed today, thanks to the Cole Hopf transformation. | ||
==Dijkstra Algorithm and transfer matrix== | ==Dijkstra Algorithm and transfer matrix== | ||
We introduce a lattice model for the directed polymer. In the companion notebook we discuss a very powerful algorithm that allows to quickly identify the ground state or the free energy of the polymer. | |||
== Cole Hopf Transformation== | == Cole Hopf Transformation== |
Revision as of 19:12, 1 January 2024
Goal: This lecture is dedicated to a classical model in disordered systems: the directed polymer in random media. It has been introduced to model vortices in superconductur or domain wall in magnetic film. We will focus here on the algorithms that identify the ground state or compute the free energy at temperature T, as well as, on the Cole-Hopf transformation that map this model on the KPZ equation.
Polymers, interfaces and manifolds in random media
We consider the following potential energy
The first term represents the elasticity of the manifold and the second term is the quenched disorder, due to the impurities. In general, the medium is D-dimensional, the internal coordinate of the manifold is d-dimensional and the height filed is N-dimensional. Hence,the following equations always holds:
In practice, we will study two cases:
- Directed Polymers (), . Examples are vortices, fronts...
- Elastic interfaces (), . Examples are domain walls...
Today we restrict to polymers. Note that they are directed because their configuration is uni-valuated.
Directed polymers and Quantum Mechanics
It is useful to re-write the model using the following change of variable
To fix the idea we can consider polymers of length , starting in and ending in . We sum over all possible polymers to compute the partition function at temperature
The previous equation gives the path integral expression of the propagator for a quantum particle, in the imaginary time. Note the the potential is a white noise and thus a time dependent potential.
In the spirit of the Feyman Kac formula we write the time-dependent Hamiltonian of the particle
Hhe partition function is the solution of the Schrodinger-like equation:
The initial condition is .
DISCUTERE CON SATYA LEGAMI FEYMAN KAC FORMULA / transfer matrix
In this equation the noise is multiplicative and not additive as in the previous lecture. However, all KPZ results can be employed today, thanks to the Cole Hopf transformation.
Dijkstra Algorithm and transfer matrix
We introduce a lattice model for the directed polymer. In the companion notebook we discuss a very powerful algorithm that allows to quickly identify the ground state or the free energy of the polymer.