L-9

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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). IPR(q)=n|ψn|2qLτq.

Delocalized eigenstates

In this case, |ψn|2Ld. Hence, we expect IPR(q)=Ld(1q),τq=d(1q).

Localized eigenstates

In this case, |ψn|21/ξlocd on ξlocd sites and almost zero elsewhere. Hence, we expect IPR(q)=const,τq=0.

Multifractal eigenstates

The exponent τq is called the multifractal exponent. It is a non-decreasing function of q with some special points:

  • τ0=d, since the wavefunction is defined on all sites. In general, τ0 represents the fractal dimension of the object under consideration and is purely a geometric property.
  • τ1=0, imposed by normalization.

To observe multifractal behavior, we expect: |ψn|2LαforLf(α)sites.

The exponent α is positive, and f(α) is called the multifractal spectrum. Its maximum corresponds to the fractal dimension of the object, which in our case is d.

The relation between the multifractal spectrum f(α) and the exponent τq is given by: IPR(q)=n|ψn|2qdαLαqLf(α) for large L. From this, we obtain: τ(q)=minα(αqf(α)).

This implies that for α*(q), which satisfies f(α*(q))=q, we have τ(q)=α*(q)qf(α*(q)).

Delocalized wavefunctions have a simple spectrum: for α=d, we find f(α=d)=d and f(αd)=. This means that α*(q)=d is independent of q.

Multifractal wavefunctions exhibit a smoother dependence, leading to a continuous spectrum with a maximum at α0, where f(α0)=d. At q=1, we have f(α1)=1 and f(α1)=α1.

Larkin model

In your homework you solved a toy model for the interface: th(r,t)=2h(r,t)+F(r). For simplicity, we assume Gaussian disorder F(r)=0, F(r)F(r)=σ2δd(rr).

You proved that:

  • the roughness exponent of this model is ζL=4d2 below dimension 4
  • the force per unit length acting on the center of the interface is f=σ/Ld
  • at long times the interface shape is

h(q)h(q)=σ2qd+2ζL.

In the real depinning model the disorder is, however, a non-linear function of h. The idea of Larkin is that this linearization is correct up to rf, the correlation length of the disorder along the h direction. This defines a Larkin length.

Indeed, from (h(r)h(0))2=ddqh(q)h(q)(1cos(qr))σ2r2ζL, you get (h(L)h(0))2=rf2,L=(rfσ)1/ζL.

Above this scale, roughness changes and pinning starts with a critical force fc=σLd/(2ζL).

In d=1 we have L=(rfσ)2/3.