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Line 48: |
Line 48: |
| </math></center> | | </math></center> |
|
| |
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| ====Discussion====
| | ==Discussion== |
| Hence, the quantity <math>\overline{Z(x,t)^2}/ (\overline{Z(x,t)})^2</math> can be computed. | | Hence, the quantity <math>\overline{Z(x,t)^2}/ (\overline{Z(x,t)})^2</math> can be computed. |
| * The denominator <math>\int_{u(0)=0}^{u(t)=0} {\cal D} u \exp\left[- \int_0^t d \tau \frac{1}{4T}(\partial_\tau u)^2\right] </math> is the free propagator and gives a contribution <math> \sim (4 T t)^{d/2}</math> . | | * The denominator <math>\int_{u(0)=0}^{u(t)=0} {\cal D} u \exp\left[- \int_0^t d \tau \frac{1}{4T}(\partial_\tau u)^2\right] </math> is the free propagator and gives a contribution <math> \sim (4 T t)^{d/2}</math> . |
Revision as of 16:43, 1 February 2025
Goal : final lecture on KPZ and directed polymers at finite dimension. We will show that for
a "glass transition" takes place.
KPZ : from 1d to the Cayley tree
We know a lot about KPZ, but still we have much to understand:
- In
we found
and a glassy regime present at all temperatures. The stationary solution of the KPZ equation describes, at long times, the fluctions of quantities like
. However it does not identify the actual distribution of
for a given
. In particular we have no idea from where Tracy Widom comes from.
- In
, there is an exact solution for the Cayley tree that predicts a freezing transition to an 1RSB phase (
).
- In finite dimension, but larger than 1, there are no exact solutions. Numerical simulations find
in
. The case
is very interesting.
Let's do replica!
To make progress in disordered systems we have to go through the moments of the partition function. For simplicity we consider polymers starting in
and ending in
. We recall that
is a Gaussian field with
- From the Wick theorem, for a generic Gaussian
field we have
The first moment
The first moment of the partition function is
Note that the term
has a short distance divergence due to the delta-function. Hence we can write:
The second moment
- Step 1: The second moment is
- Step 2: Use Wick and derive:
- Step 3: Now change coordinate
and get:
Discussion
Hence, the quantity
can be computed.
- The denominator
is the free propagator and gives a contribution
.
- Let us define the numerator
Remark 1: From Valentina's lecture, remember that if
the partition function is self-averaging and
.
The condition above is sufficient but not necessary. It is enough that
, when
, to have the equivalence between annealed and quenched averages.
Remark 2: From Feynman-Kac we can write the following equation
Here the Hamiltonian reads:
The single particle potential is time independent and actractive .
At large times the behaviour is dominatated by the low energy part of the spectrum.
- In
an actractive potential always gives a bound state. In particular the ground state has a negative energy
. Hence at large times
grows exponentially. This means that at all temperature, when
- For
the low part of the spectrum is controlled by the strength of the prefactor
. At high temperature we have a continuum positive spectrum, at low temperature bound states exist. Hence, when 
This transition, in
, is between a high temeprature,
phase and a low temeprature
no RSB phase.