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To illustrate this, consider a single configuration, for example the one where all spins are up. The energy of this configuration is given by the sum of all the couplings between neighboring spins: | To illustrate this, consider a single configuration, for example the one where all spins are up. The energy of this configuration is given by the sum of all the couplings between neighboring spins: | ||
<center><math> E[\ | <center><math> E[\sigma_1=1,\sigma_2=1,ldots] = - \sum_{\langle i, j \rangle} J_{ij}. </math></center> Since the the couplings are random, the energy associated with this particular configuration is itself a Gaussian random variable, with zero mean and a variance proportional to the number of terms in the sum — that is, of order <math>N</math>. |
Revision as of 14:17, 2 August 2025
In a system with degrees of freedom, the number of configurations grows exponentially with . For simplicity, consider Ising spins that take two values, , located on a lattice of size in dimensions. In this case, and the number of configurations is .
In the presence of disorder, the energy associated with a given configuration becomes a random quantity. For instance, in the Edwards-Anderson model:
where the sum runs over nearest neighbors , and the couplings are independent and identically distributed (i.i.d.) Gaussian random variables with zero mean and unit variance.
The energy of a given configuration is a random quantity because each system corresponds to a different realization of the disorder. In an experiment, this means that each of us has a different physical sample; in a numerical simulation, it means that each of us has generated a different set of couplings .
To illustrate this, consider a single configuration, for example the one where all spins are up. The energy of this configuration is given by the sum of all the couplings between neighboring spins:
Since the the couplings are random, the energy associated with this particular configuration is itself a Gaussian random variable, with zero mean and a variance proportional to the number of terms in the sum — that is, of order .