Marginal stability in jammed packings: quasicontacts and weak contacts
Yoav Kallus, Salvatore Torquato

TL;DR
This paper investigates the role of quasicontacts and weak contacts in the marginal stability of jammed sphere packings, revealing their significance in dynamic stability and high-dimensional density estimates.
Contribution
It demonstrates the importance of quasicontacts in dynamic stability, revises previous high-dimensional density estimates, and highlights their role in minimally contact lattice packings.
Findings
Quasicontacts grow faster than contacts in high dimensions.
Including quasicontacts refines the asymptotic density estimate.
Quasicontacts are crucial in minimally stable lattice packings.
Abstract
Maximally random jammed (MRJ) sphere packing is a prototypical example of a system naturally poised at the margin between underconstraint and overconstraint. This marginal stability has traditionally been understood in terms of isostaticity, the equality of the number of mechanical contacts and the number of degrees of freedom. Quasicontacts, pairs of spheres on the verge of coming in contact, are irrelevant for static stability, but they come into play when considering dynamic stability, as does the distribution of contact forces. We show that the effects of marginal dynamic stability, as manifested in the distributions of quasicontacts and weak contacts, are consequential and nontrivial. We study these ideas first in the context of MRJ packing of d-dimensional spheres, where we show that the abundance of quasicontacts grows at a faster rate than that of contacts. We reexamine a…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
