Goal 1: final lecture on KPZ and directed polymers at finite dimension. We will show that for
a "glass transition" takes place.
Goal 2: We will mention some ideas related to glass transition in true glasses.
Part 1: KPZ in finite dimension
- In
we found
and a glassy regime present at all temperatures. Moreover, the stationary solution tell us that
is a Brownian motion in
. However this solution does not identify the actual distribution of
for a given
. In particular we have no idea from where Tracy Widom comes from.
- In
the exponents are not known. There is an exact solution for the Caley tree (infinite dimension) that predicts a freezing transition to an 1RSB phase (
).
Let's do replica!
To make progress in disordered systems we have to go through the moments of the partition function. We recall that
is a Gaussian field with
- From the Wick theorem, for a generic Gaussian
field we have
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:
Exercise L4-A: the second moment
Now you can change coordinate
and get:
Failed to parse (syntax error): {\displaystyle \overline{Z[x_t,t]^2} = (\overline{Z[x_t,t]})^2 \right]\int_{u(0)=0}^{u(t)=0} {\cal D} u \exp\left[- \int_0^t d \tau \frac{1}{4T}(\partial_\tau u)^2+ \frac{1}{T^2} \delta[x_1(u(\tau)]\right] }
Part 2: Structural glasses