327 research outputs found

    Anisotropic finite-size scaling of an elastic string at the depinning threshold in a random-periodic medium

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    We numerically study the geometry of a driven elastic string at its sample-dependent depinning threshold in random-periodic media. We find that the anisotropic finite-size scaling of the average square width w2ˉ\bar{w^2} and of its associated probability distribution are both controlled by the ratio k=M/Lζdepk=M/L^{\zeta_{\mathrm{dep}}}, where ζdep\zeta_{\mathrm{dep}} is the random-manifold depinning roughness exponent, LL is the longitudinal size of the string and MM the transverse periodicity of the random medium. The rescaled average square width w2ˉ/L2ζdep\bar{w^2}/L^{2\zeta_{\mathrm{dep}}} displays a non-trivial single minimum for a finite value of kk. We show that the initial decrease for small kk reflects the crossover at k1k \sim 1 from the random-periodic to the random-manifold roughness. The increase for very large kk implies that the increasingly rare critical configurations, accompanying the crossover to Gumbel critical-force statistics, display anomalous roughness properties: a transverse-periodicity scaling in spite that w2ˉM\bar{w^2} \ll M, and subleading corrections to the standard random-manifold longitudinal-size scaling. Our results are relevant to understanding the dimensional crossover from interface to particle depinning.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figures, Commentary from the reviewer available in Papers in Physic

    The universal high temperature regime of pinned elastic objects

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    We study the high temperature regime within the glass phase of an elastic object with short ranged disorder. In that regime we argue that the scaling functions of any observable are described by a continuum model with a δ\delta-correlated disorder and that they are universal up to only two parameters that can be explicitly computed. This is shown numerically on the roughness of directed polymer models and by dimensional and functional renormalization group arguments. We discuss experimental consequences such as non-monotonous behaviour with temperature.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure

    Uniqueness of the thermodynamic limit for driven disordered elastic interfaces

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    We study the finite size fluctuations at the depinning transition for a one-dimensional elastic interface of size LL displacing in a disordered medium of transverse size M=kLζM=k L^\zeta with periodic boundary conditions, where ζ\zeta is the depinning roughness exponent and kk is a finite aspect ratio parameter. We focus on the crossover from the infinitely narrow (k0k\to 0) to the infinitely wide (kk\to \infty) medium. We find that at the thermodynamic limit both the value of the critical force and the precise behavior of the velocity-force characteristics are {\it unique} and kk-independent. We also show that the finite size fluctuations of the critical force (bias and variance) as well as the global width of the interface cross over from a power-law to a logarithm as a function of kk. Our results are relevant for understanding anisotropic size-effects in force-driven and velocity-driven interfaces.Comment: 10 pages, 12 figure

    Second-order magnetic critical points at finite magnetic fields: Revisiting Arrott plots

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    The so-called Arrott plot, which consists in plotting H/M against M2, with H the applied magnetic field and M the magnetization, is used to extract valuable information in second-order magnetic phase transitions. Besides, it is widely accepted that a negative slope in the Arrott plot is indicative of a first-order magnetic transition. This is known as the Banerjee criterion. In consequence, the zero-field transition temperature T∗ is reported as the characteristic first-order transition temperature. By carefully analyzing the mean-field Landau model used for studying first-order magnetic transitions, we show in this work that T∗ corresponds in fact to a triple point where three first-order lines meet. More importantly, this analysis reveals the existence of two symmetricalsecond-order critical points at finite magnetic field (Tc,±Hc). We then show that a modified Arrott plot can be used to obtain information about these second-order critical points. To support this idea we analyze experimentaldata on La2/3Ca1/3MnO3 and discuss an estimate for the location of the triple point and the second-order critical pointsFil: Bustingorry, Sebastián. Comisión Nacional de Energía Atómica. Centro Atómico Bariloche; Argentina. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas; ArgentinaFil: Pomiro, Fernando. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Centro Científico Tecnológico Conicet - Córdoba. Instituto de Investigaciones en Físico-química de Córdoba. Universidad Nacional de Córdoba. Facultad de Ciencias Químicas. Instituto de Investigaciones en Físico-química de Córdoba; ArgentinaFil: Aurelio, Gabriela. Comisión Nacional de Energía Atómica. Centro Atómico Bariloche; Argentina. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas; ArgentinaFil: Curiale, Carlos Javier. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas; Argentina. Comisión Nacional de Energía Atómica. Centro Atómico Bariloche; Argentin

    Random-Manifold to Random-Periodic Depinning of an Elastic Interface

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    We study numerically the depinning transition of driven elastic interfaces in a random-periodic medium with localized periodic-correlation peaks in the direction of motion. The analysis of the moving interface geometry reveals the existence of several characteristic lengths separating different length-scale regimes of roughness. We determine the scaling behavior of these lengths as a function of the velocity, temperature, driving force, and transverse periodicity. A dynamical roughness diagram is thus obtained which contains, at small length scales, the critical and fast-flow regimes typical of the random-manifold (or domain wall) depinning, and at large length-scales, the critical and fast-flow regimes typical of the random-periodic (or charge-density wave) depinning. From the study of the equilibrium geometry we are also able to infer the roughness diagram in the creep regime, extending the depinning roughness diagram below threshold. Our results are relevant for understanding the geometry at depinning of arrays of elastically coupled thin manifolds in a disordered medium such as driven particle chains or vortex-line planar arrays. They also allow to properly control the effect of transverse periodic boundary conditions in large-scale simulations of driven disordered interfaces.Comment: 19 pages, 10 figure

    Critical behavior and out-of-equilibrium dynamics of a two-dimensional Ising model with dynamic couplings

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    We study the critical behavior and the out-of-equilibrium dynamics of a two-dimensional Ising model with non-static interactions. In our model, bonds are dynamically changing according to a majority rule depending on the set of closest neighbors of each spin pair, which prevents the system from ordering in a full ferromagnetic or antiferromagnetic state. Using a parallel-tempering Monte Carlo algorithm, we find that the model undergoes a continuous phase transition at finite temperature, which belongs to the Ising universality class. The properties of the bond structure and the ground-state entropy are also studied. Finally, we analyze the out-of-equilibrium dynamics which displays typical glassy characteristics at a temperature well below the critical one.Comment: 10 pages with 12 figure

    Domain growth within the backbone of the three-dimensional ±J\pm J Edwards-Anderson spin glass

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    The goal of this work is to show that a ferromagnetic-like domain growth process takes place within the backbone of the three-dimensional ±J\pm J Edwards-Anderson (EA) spin glass model. To sustain this affirmation we study the heterogeneities displayed in the out-of-equilibrium dynamics of the model. We show that both correlation function and mean flipping time distribution present features that have a direct relation with spatial heterogeneities, and that they can be characterized by the backbone structure. In order to gain intuition we analyze the pure ferromagnetic Ising model, where we show the presence of dynamical heterogeneities in the mean flipping time distribution that are directly associated to ferromagnetic growing domains. We extend a method devised to detect domain walls in the Ising model to carry out a similar analysis in the three-dimensional EA spin glass model. This allows us to show that there exists a domain growth process within the backbone of this model.Comment: 10 pages, 10 figure
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