Origin of `end of aging' and sub-aging scaling behavior in glassy dynamics
Paolo Sibani, Gregory G. Kenning

TL;DR
This paper investigates the origins of sub-aging and end of aging phenomena in glassy systems, challenging the universality of the $t_{obs}/t_{w}^b5$ scaling law and proposing a common mechanism based on initial conditions.
Contribution
It introduces a unified mechanism explaining both sub-aging and end of aging, considering the effects of initial thermal quench conditions on glassy dynamics.
Findings
Scaling behavior depends on initial cooling protocol.
Response curves become independent of $t_w$ at large $t_{obs}$.
Proposes a mechanism linking initial conditions to aging phenomena.
Abstract
Linear response functions of aging systems are routinely interpreted using the scaling variable ,where is the time at which the field conjugated to the response is turned on or off, and where is the `observation' time elapsed from the field change. The response curve obtained for different values of are usually collapsed using values of slightly below one, a scaling behavior generally known as \emph{sub-aging}. Recent spin glass Thermoremanent Magnetization experiments have shown that the value of is strongly affected by the form of the initial cooling protocol (Rodriguez et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 91, 037203, 2003), and even more importantly, (Kenning et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 97, 057201, 2006) that the dependence of the response curves vanishes altogether in the limit . The…
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