L-9
Eigenstates
Without disorder, the eigenstates are delocalized plane waves.
In the presence of disorder, three scenarios can arise: delocalized eigenstates, where the wavefunction remains extended; localized eigenstates, where the wavefunction is exponentially confined to a finite region; multifractal eigenstates, occurring at the mobility edge, where the wavefunction exhibits a complex, scale-dependent structure.
To distinguish these regimes, it is useful to introduce the inverse participation ratio (IPR).
Delocalized eigenstates
In this case, . Hence, we expect
Localized eigenstates
In this case, on sites and almost zero elsewhere. Hence, we expect
Multifractal eigenstates
The exponent is called the multifractal exponent. It is a non-decreasing function of with some special points:
- , since the wavefunction is defined on all sites. In general, represents the fractal dimension of the object under consideration and is purely a geometric property.
- , imposed by normalization.
To observe multifractal behavior, we expect:
The exponent is positive, and is called the multifractal spectrum. Its maximum corresponds to the fractal dimension of the object, which in our case is .
The relation between the multifractal spectrum and the exponent is given by: for large . From this, we obtain:
This implies that for , which satisfies we have
Delocalized wavefunctions have a simple spectrum: for , we find and . This means that is independent of .
Multifractal wavefunctions exhibit a smoother dependence, leading to a continuous spectrum with a maximum at , where . At , we have and .
Larkin model
In your homework you solved a toy model for the interface: For simplicity, we assume Gaussian disorder , .
You proved that:
- the roughness exponent of this model is below dimension 4
- the force per unit length acting on the center of the interface is
- at long times the interface shape is
In the real depinning model the disorder is, however, a non-linear function of . The idea of Larkin is that this linearization is correct up to , the correlation length of the disorder along the direction. This defines a Larkin length.
Indeed, from you get
Above this scale, roughness changes and pinning starts with a critical force
In we have .