Undirected polymers in random environment: path properties in the mean field limit
Nicola Kistler, Adrien Schertzer

TL;DR
This paper analyzes the geometric structure of minimal energy undirected polymers in high-dimensional random environments, revealing a transition from oriented to backstep-rich paths and providing a detailed path description.
Contribution
It introduces a multiscale second moment method to precisely describe optimal paths in undirected polymers in high dimensions, extending understanding of their geometric properties.
Findings
Optimal paths are mostly oriented near the origin and endpoint.
Backsteps connect distant energetic reservoirs, balancing energy and entropy.
The results provide a constructive proof of the ground state energy order.
Abstract
We consider the problem of undirected polymers (tied at the endpoints) in random environment, also known as the unoriented first passage percolation on the hypercube, in the limit of large dimensions. By means of the multiscale refinement of the second moment method we obtain a fairly precise geometrical description of optimal paths, i.e. of polymers with minimal energy. The picture which emerges can be loosely summarized as follows. The energy of the polymer is, to first approximation, uniformly spread along the strand. The polymer's bonds carry however a lower energy than in the directed setting, and are reached through the following geometrical evolution. Close to the origin, the polymer proceeds in oriented fashion -- it is thus as stretched as possible. The tension of the strand decreases however gradually, with the polymer allowing for more and more backsteps as it enters the core…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStochastic processes and statistical mechanics · Theoretical and Computational Physics · Advanced Mathematical Modeling in Engineering
