Temperature-induced crossovers in the static roughness of a one-dimensional interface
Elisabeth Agoritsas, Vivien Lecomte, Thierry Giamarchi

TL;DR
This paper investigates how finite temperature and interface width influence the scaling regimes of a one-dimensional disordered elastic interface, revealing temperature-dependent crossovers and regimes through analytical and variational methods.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed analytical study of temperature-induced crossovers in the static roughness of a 1D interface, incorporating finite width effects and multiple regimes.
Findings
Identification of two temperature regimes with a crossover at a critical temperature.
Derivation of a temperature-independent Larkin length at low temperatures.
Analysis of the roughness scaling and its temperature dependence.
Abstract
At finite temperature and in presence of disorder, a one-dimensional elastic interface displays different scaling regimes at small and large lengthscales. Using a replica approach and a Gaussian Variational Method (GVM), we explore the consequences of a finite interface width on the small-lengthscale fluctuations. We compute analytically the static roughness of the interface as a function of the distance between two points on the interface. We focus on the case of short-range elasticity and random-bond disorder. We show that for a finite width two temperature regimes exist. At low temperature, the expected thermal and random-manifold regimes, respectively for small and large scales, connect via an intermediate `modified' Larkin regime, that we determine. This regime ends at a temperature-independent characteristic `Larkin' length. Above a certain `critical'…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTheoretical and Computational Physics · Advanced Physical and Chemical Molecular Interactions · Material Dynamics and Properties
