TBan-I: Difference between revisions
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This is an estimation of the typical value of the minimum. It is a crucial relation that will be used frequently in this context. | This is an estimation of the typical value of the minimum. It is a crucial relation that will be used frequently in this context. | ||
* '''Third relation''' | * '''Third relation''' | ||
<center> <math>Q_M(E) = e^{M \log(1 - P(E))} \sim \exp\left(-M P(E)\right)</math> </center> | |||
This is an approximation valid for large ''M'' and around the typical value of the minimum energy. |
Latest revision as of 16:39, 6 August 2025
Detour: Extreme Value Statistics
Consider the energies as independent and identically distributed (i.i.d.) random variables drawn from a distribution . It is useful to introduce the cumulative probability of finding an energy smaller than E
We define:
Our goal is to compute the cumulative distribution:
for large . To achieve this, we rely on three key relations:
- First relation:
This relation is exact but depends on M and the precise form of . However, in the large M limit, a universal behavior emerges.
- Second relation:
This is an estimation of the typical value of the minimum. It is a crucial relation that will be used frequently in this context.
- Third relation
This is an approximation valid for large M and around the typical value of the minimum energy.