1,662 research outputs found
Mean-field solution of the Potts glass near the transition temperature to the ordered phase
We expand asymptotically mean-field solutions of the Potts glass with
various levels of replica-symmetry breaking below the transition temperature to
the glassy phase. We find that the ordered phase is degenerate and solutions
with one hierarchy of spin replicas and with the full continuous
replica-symmetry breaking coexist for . The latter
emerges immediately with the instability of the replica-symmetric one. Apart
from these two solutions there exists also a succession of unstable states
converging to the solution with the continuous replica-symmetry breaking that
is marginally stable and has the highest free energy.Comment: 11 pages, no figure
Complete Wiener-Hopf Solution of the X-Ray Edge Problem
We present a complete solution of the soft x-ray edge problem within a
field-theoretic approach based on the Wiener-Hopf infinite-time technique. We
derive for the first time within this approach critical asymptotics of all the
relevant quantities for the x-ray problem as well as their nonuniversal
prefactors. Thereby we obtain the most complete field-theoretic solution of the
problem with a number of new experimentally relevant results. We make thorough
comparison of the proposed Wiener-Hopf technique with other approaches based on
finite-time methods. It is proven that the Fredholm, finite-time solution
converges smoothly to the Wiener-Hopf one and that the latter is stable with
respect to perturbations in the long-time limit. Further on we disclose a wide
interval of intermediate times showing quasicritical behavior deviating from
the Wiener-Hopf one. The quasicritical behavior of the core-hole Green function
is derived exactly from the Wiener-Hopf solution and the quasicritical exponent
is shown to match the result of Nozi\`eres and De Dominicis. The reasons for
the quasicritical behavior and the way of a crossover to the infinite-time
solution are expounded and the physical relevance of the Nozi\`eres and De
Dominicis as well as of the Winer-Hopf results are discussed.Comment: 19 pages, RevTex, no figure
Replica trick with real replicas: A way to build in thermodynamic homogeneity
We use real replicas to investigate stability of thermodynamic homogeneity of
the free energy of the Sherrington-Kirkpatrick (SK) model of spin glasses.
Within the replica trick with the replica symmetric ansatz we show that the
averaged free energy at low temperatures is not thermodynamically homogeneous.
The demand of minimization of the inhomogeneity of thermodynamic potentials
leads in a natural way to the hierarchical solution of the Parisi type.
Conditions for the global thermodynamic homogeneity are derived and evaluated
for the SK and -spin infinite range models.Comment: 6 pages, presented at SPDSA2004 Hayama (Japan), to appear in Progr.
Theor. Phy
Two-particle renormalizations in many-fermion perturbation theory: Importance of the Ward identity
We analyze two-particle renormalizations within many-fermion perturbation
expansion. We show that present diagrammatic theories suffer from lack of a
direct diagrammatic control over the physical two-particle functions. To
rectify this we introduce and prove a Ward identity enabling an explicit
construction of the self-energy from a given two-particle irreducible vertex.
Approximations constructed in this way are causal, obey conservation laws and
offer an explicit diagrammatic control of singularities in dynamical
two-particle functions.Comment: REVTeX4, 4 pages, 2 EPS figure
Density and current response functions in strongly disordered electron systems: Diffusion, electrical conductivity and Einstein relation
We study consequences of gauge invariance and charge conservation of an
electron gas in a strong random potential perturbed by a weak electromagnetic
field. We use quantum equations of motion and Ward identities for one- and
two-particle averaged Green functions to establish exact relations between
density and current response functions. In particular we find precise
conditions under which we can extract the current-current correlation function
from the density-density correlation function and vice versa. We use these
results in two different ways to extend validity of a formula associating the
density response function with the electrical conductivity from semiclassical
equilibrium to quantum nonequilibrium systems. Finally we introduce quantum
diffusion via a response relating the current with the negative gradient of the
charge density. With the aid of this response function we derive a quantum
version of the Einstein relation and prove the existence of the diffusion pole
in the zero-temperature electron-hole correlation function with the the
long-range spatial fluctuations controlled by the static diffusion constant.Comment: 16 pages, REVTeX4, 6 EPS figure
Asymptotic limit of high spatial dimensions and thermodynamic consistence
The question of thermodynamic consistence and -derivability of the
asymptotic limit of high spatial dimensions for quantum itinerant models is
addressed. It is shown that although the irreducible -particle Green
functions are local, reducible vertex functions retain different momentum
dependence. As a consequence, the vertex corrections to conductivity do not
generally vanish in the mean-field limit. The mean-field theory is a
-derivable approximation only if regular nonlocal or anomalous local
external sources are admitted.Comment: REVTeX, 4 pages, 2 EPS figure
Continuous replica-symmetry breaking in mean-field spin-glass models: Perturbation expansion without the replica trick
The full mean-field solution of spin glass models with a continuous
order-parameter function is not directly available and approximate schemes must
be used to assess its properties. The averaged physical quantities are to be
represented via the replica trick and the limit to zero number of replicas is
to be performed for each of them. To avoid this we introduce a perturbation
expansion for a mean-field free-energy functional with a continuous
order-parameter function without the need to refer to the replica trick. The
expansion can be used to calculate all physical quantities in all mean-field
spin-glass models and at all temperatures, including zero temperature. The
small expansion parameter is a difference between the continuous
order-parameter function and the corresponding order parameter from the
solution with one level of replica-symmetry breaking. The first correction
beyond the approximation with one level of replica-symmetry breaking is
explicitly evaluated in the glassy phase of the Sherrington-Kirkpatrick model.Comment: 13 pages, 7 figure
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