Damage spreading transition in glasses: a probe for the ruggedness of the configurational landscape
M. Heerema, F. Ritort

TL;DR
This paper investigates damage spreading transitions in glasses using mode-coupling theory, revealing a critical temperature that distinguishes regimes where damage either propagates or remains localized, linked to the landscape's ruggedness.
Contribution
It introduces a theoretical framework connecting damage spreading to the ruggedness of the energy landscape in glasses, supported by numerical simulations.
Findings
Existence of a critical temperature $T_0$ for damage spreading transition.
Damage spreading is influenced by noise correlations and landscape ruggedness.
Damage spreading can serve as a probe for the configurational landscape's ruggedness.
Abstract
We consider damage spreading transitions in the framework of mode-coupling theory. This theory describes relaxation processes in glasses in the mean-field approximation which are known to be characterized by the presence of an exponentially large number of meta-stable states. For systems evolving under identical but arbitrarily correlated noises we demonstrate that there exists a critical temperature which separates two different dynamical regimes depending on whether damage spreads or not in the asymptotic long-time limit. This transition exists for generic noise correlations such that the zero damage solution is stable at high-temperatures being minimal for maximal noise correlations. Although this dynamical transition depends on the type of noise correlations we show that the asymptotic damage has the good properties of an dynamical order parameter such as: 1) Independence on…
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