Effects of compression on the vibrational modes of marginally jammed solids
Matthieu Wyart, Leonardo E. Silbert, Sidney R. Nagel, Thomas A. Witten

TL;DR
This paper investigates how compression influences the vibrational modes in marginally jammed solids, revealing pressure-sensitive features and a lower bound on contact number for stability, with implications for understanding glassy materials.
Contribution
It demonstrates the pressure dependence of vibrational modes and establishes a generalized rigidity criterion in jammed solids, supported by simulations and theoretical analysis.
Findings
Vibrational density of states converges to a non-zero constant at low frequencies.
A low-frequency cutoff w* appears, increasing with compression.
Pressure lowers the frequency of excess vibrational modes.
Abstract
Glasses have a large excess of low-frequency vibrational modes in comparison with most crystalline solids. We show that such a feature is a necessary consequence of the weak connectivity of the solid, and that the frequency of modes in excess is very sensitive to the pressure. We analyze in particular two systems whose density D(w) of vibrational modes of angular frequency w display scaling behaviors with the packing fraction: (i) simulations of jammed packings of particles interacting through finite-range, purely repulsive potentials, comprised of weakly compressed spheres at zero temperature and (ii) a system with the same network of contacts, but where the force between any particles in contact (and therefore the total pressure) is set to zero. We account in the two cases for the observed a) convergence of D(w) toward a non-zero constant as w goes to 0, b) appearance of a…
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