T-2: Difference between revisions

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=== Problem 3: the quenched free energy ===
=== Problem 2: the quenched free energy ===





Revision as of 22:04, 6 December 2023

In this set of problems, we use the replica method to study the equilibrium properties of a prototypical toy model of glasses, the spherical p-spin model.

In the spherical p-spin model the configurations σ=(σ1,,σN) that the system can take satisfy the spherical constraint i=1Nσi2=N, and the energy associated to each configuration is

E(σ)=1i1i2ipNJi1i2ipσi1σi2σip,

where the coupling constants Ji1i2ip are independent random variables with Gaussian distribution with zero mean and variance p!/(2Np1), and p3 is an integer.



Problem 1: the annealed free energy

In TD1, we defined the quenched free energy density as the quantity controlling the scaling of the typical value of the partition function Z. The annealed free energy fann instead controls the scaling of the average value of Z. It is defined by

fann=limN1βNlogZ.

Let us compute this quantity.


  1. Energy correlations. At variance with the REM, in the spherical p-spin the energies at different configurations are correlated. Show that E(σ)E(τ)=Nq(σ,τ)p/2+o(1), where q(σ,τ)=1Ni=1Nσiτi is the overlap between the two configurations. Why an we say that for p this model converges with the REM discussed in the previous TD?


  1. Energy contribution. Show that computing Z boils down to computing the average eβJi1ipσi1σip. Compute this average. Hint: if X is a centered Gaussian variable with variance σ2, then eαX=eα2σ22.


  1. Entropy contribution. The volume of a sphere of radius N in dimension N is given by NN2πN2/(N2)!. Use the large-N asymptotic of this to conclude the calculation of the annealed free energy.



Problem 2: the quenched free energy

  1. Heavy tails and concentration. ccc


  1. Inverse participation ratio. cccc