Role of saddles in mean-field dynamics above the glass transition
- 22 June 2001
- journal article
- Published by IOP Publishing in Journal of Physics A: General Physics
- Vol. 34 (26) , 5317-5326
- https://doi.org/10.1088/0305-4470/34/26/302
Abstract
Recent numerical developments in the study of glassy systems have shown that it is possible to give a purely geometric interpretation of the dynamic glass transition by considering the properties of unstable saddle points of the energy. Here we further develop this approach in the context of a mean-field model, by analytically studying the properties of the closest saddle point to an equilibrium configuration of the system. We prove that when the glass transition is approached the energy of the closest saddle goes to the threshold energy, defined as the energy level below which the degree of instability of the typical stationary points vanishes. Moreover, we show that the distance between a typical equilibrium configuration and the closest saddle is always very small and that, surprisingly, it is almost independent of the temperature.Keywords
All Related Versions
This publication has 22 references indexed in Scilit:
- Mode-coupling approximations, glass theory and disordered systemsPhysica A: Statistical Mechanics and its Applications, 1996
- Barriers and metastable states as saddle points in the replica approachJournal de Physique I, 1993
- Analytical solution of the off-equilibrium dynamics of a long-range spin-glass modelPhysical Review Letters, 1993
- The sphericalp-spin interaction spin-glass modelZeitschrift für Physik B Condensed Matter, 1993
- The sphericalp-spin interaction spin glass model: the staticsZeitschrift für Physik B Condensed Matter, 1992
- Perspective on the glass transitionJournal of Physics and Chemistry of Solids, 1988
- Stable and metastable states in mean-field Potts and structural glassesPhysical Review B, 1987
- p-spin-interaction spin-glass models: Connections with the structural glass problemPhysical Review B, 1987
- Connections between some kinetic and equilibrium theories of the glass transitionPhysical Review A, 1987
- Dynamical model of the liquid-glass transitionPhysical Review A, 1984