TBan-III

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Exercise 1: Back to REM

The Random Energy Model (REM) exhibits two distinct phases:

  • High-Temperature Phase:
At high temperatures, the system is in a paramagnetic phase where the entropy is extensive, and the occupation probability of a configuration is approximately .
  • Low-Temperature Phase:
Below a critical freezing temperature , the system transitions into a glassy phase. In this phase, the entropy becomes subextensive (i.e., the extensive contribution vanishes), and only a few configurations are visited with finite, -independent probabilities.

Calculating the Freezing Temperature

Thanks to the computation of , we can identify the fingerprints of the glassy phase and calculate . Let's compare the weight of the ground state against the weight of all other states:

Behavior in Different Phases:

  • High-Temperature Phase ():
In this regime, the weight of the excited states diverges. This indicates that the ground state is not deep enough to render the system glassy.
  • Low-Temperature Phase ():
In this regime, the integral is finite:

This result implies that below the freezing temperature , the weight of all excited states is of the same order as the weight of the ground state. Consequently, the ground state is occupied with a finite probability, reminiscent of Bose-Einstein condensation.

Exercise 2: Edwards-Wilkinson Interface with Stationary Initial Condition

Consider an Edwards-Wilkinson interface in 1+1 dimensions, at temperature , and of length with periodic boundary conditions:

where is a Gaussian white noise with zero mean and variance:

The solution can be written in Fourier space as:

with Fourier decomposition:

where .

In class, we computed the width of the interface starting from a flat interface at , i.e., . The mean square displacement of a point is similar but includes also the contribution of the zero mode. The result is:

The first term describes the diffusion of the center of mass, while the second comes from the non-zero Fourier modes.

Now consider the case where the initial interface is drawn from the equilibrium distribution at temperature :

For simplicity, set the initial center of mass to zero: . We consider the mean square displacement of the point . The average is performed over both the thermal noise and the initial condition :

Questions:

  1. Compute the ensemble average of the Gaussian initial condition:
  • Hint:* Write the integral in terms of Fourier modes and use .
  1. Show that:
  1. Show that:

where the term depends only on the initial condition. Show that:

  1. Hence write:

Estimate for .

  1. Estimate for and large .
  • Hint:* Write the series as an integral using the continuum variable . It is helpful to know:

Provide the two asymptotic behaviors of .