Lab Home | Phone | Search
Center for Nonlinear Studies  Center for Nonlinear Studies
 Home 
 People 
 Current 
 Affiliates 
 Visitors 
 Students 
 Research 
 ICAM-LANL 
 Publications 
 Conferences 
 Workshops 
 Sponsorship 
 Talks 
 Colloquia 
 Colloquia Archive 
 Seminars 
 Postdoc Seminars Archive 
 Quantum Lunch 
 Quantum Lunch Archive 
 CMS Colloquia 
 Q-Mat Seminars 
 Q-Mat Seminars Archive 
 P/T Colloquia 
 Archive 
 Kac Lectures 
 Kac Fellows 
 Dist. Quant. Lecture 
 Ulam Scholar 
 Colloquia 
 
 Jobs 
 Postdocs 
 CNLS Fellowship Application 
 Students 
 Student Program 
 Visitors 
 Description 
 Past Visitors 
 Services 
 General 
 
 History of CNLS 
 
 Maps, Directions 
 CNLS Office 
 T-Division 
 LANL 
 
Monday, April 30, 2007
11:00 AM - 12:00 PM
CNLS Conference Room (TA-3, Bldg 1690)

Seminar

Large-Scale Simulations of Ising Spin Glasses on bond-diluted Lattices

Stephen Boettcher
Emory University

We discuss a meta-heuristic method based on self-organized criticality. While the heuristic is applicable to many NP-hard combinatorial problems, we present here simulations on very large, frustrated spin systems with quenched disorder in the glassy state. Specifically, results are presented for low-temperature excitations of the bond-diluted Edwards-Anderson spin glass. Well above bond percolation $p_c$, dilution provides an efficient means to obtain accurate predictions for equilibrium properties of the glassy phase. The domain-wall stiffness exponent $y_d$ is computed in up to $d=7$ dimensions. Fitting $y_d$ yields a lower critical dimension of $d_l=5/2$ (where $y_d=0$) to within 0.1\%, in agreement with replica theory. Directly at $p_c$, the boundary between the spin-glass and the paramagnetic phase at $T=0$, equilibrium theory provides experimentally testable predictions for the shape of the phase boundary $T_g\sim(p-p_c)^\phi$, with simulations predicting $\phi=1.12(1)$.

Host: Carl Bender, T-CNLS