4.7 Article

Broad relaxation spectrum and the field theory of glassy dynamics for pinned elastic systems

Journal

PHYSICAL REVIEW E
Volume 69, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevE.69.061107

Keywords

-

Ask authors/readers for more resources

We study thermally activated, low-temperature equilibrium dynamics of elastic systems pinned by disorder using one loop functional renormalization group (FRG). Through a series of increasingly complete approximations, we investigate how the field theory reveals the glassy nature of the dynamics, in particular divergent barriers and barrier distributions controling the spectrum of relaxation times. First, we naively assume a single relaxation time tau(k) for each wave vector k, leading to analytical expressions for equilibrium dynamical response and correlations. These exhibit two distinct scaling regimes (scaling variables Tk(theta) ln t and t/tau(k), respectively, with T the temperature, theta the energy fluctuation exponent, and tau(k)similar toe(ck-theta)/T) and are easily extended to quasiequilibrium and aging regimes. A careful study of the dynamical operators encoding for fluctuations of the relaxation times shows that this first approach is unsatisfactory. A second stage of approximation including these fluctuations, based on a truncation of the dynamical effective action to a random friction model, yields a size (L) dependent log-normal distribution of relaxation times (effective barriers centered around L-theta and of fluctuations similar toL(theta/2)) and some procedure to estimate dynamical scaling functions. Finally, we study the full structure of the running dynamical effective action within the field theory. We find that relaxation time distributions are nontrivial (broad but not log normal) and encoded in a closed hierarchy of FRG equations divided into levels p=0,1,..., corresponding to vertices proportional to the pth power of frequency omega(p). We show how each level p can be solved independently of higher ones, the lowest one (p=0) comprising the statics. A thermal boundary layer ansatz (TBLA) appears as a consistent solution. It extends the one discovered in the statics which was shown to embody droplet thermal fluctuations. Although perturbative control remains a challenge, the structure of the dynamical TBLA which encodes barrier distributions opens the way for deeper understanding of the field theory approach to glasses.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available