A characteristic energy scale in glasses
Edan Lerner, Eran Bouchbinder

TL;DR
This paper identifies a characteristic energy scale in glasses based on their response to localized forces, revealing its significant increase at lower temperatures and its relation to soft excitations, with implications for understanding glass transition dynamics.
Contribution
It introduces a novel bulk measure of the glassy energy scale linked to soft excitations, showing its temperature dependence, size effects, and relation to vibrational modes.
Findings
The energy scale increases dramatically with decreasing temperature.
It correlates with the energy of the softest vibrational mode.
It exhibits strong size and dimensionality dependence.
Abstract
Glasses feature a broad distribution of relaxation times and activation energies without an obvious characteristic scale. At the same time, macroscopic quantities such as Newtonian viscosity and nonlinear plastic deformation, are interpreted in terms of a characteristic energy scale, e.g. an effective temperature-dependent activation energy in Arrhenius relations. Nevertheless, despite its fundamental importance, such a characteristic energy scale has not been robustly identified. Inspired by the accumulated evidence regarding the crucial role played by soft quasilocalized excitations in glassy dynamics, we propose that the bulk average of the glass response to a localized force dipole defines such a characteristic energy scale. We show that this characteristic glassy energy scale features remarkable properties: It increases dramatically with decreasing temperature of equilibrium…
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