Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1872570 Physics Procedia 2010 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

The concept of replica symmetry breaking found in the solution of the mean-field Sherrington-Kirkpatrick spinglass model has been applied to a variety of problems in science ranging from biological to computational and even financial analysis. Thus it is of paramount importance to understand which predictions of the mean-field solution apply to non-mean-field systems, such as realistic short-range spin-glass models. The one-dimensional spin glass with random power-law interactions promises to be an ideal test-bed to answer this question: Not only can large system sizes—which are usually a shortcoming in simulations of high-dimensional short-range system—be studied, by tuning the power-law exponent of the interactions the universality class of the model can be continuously tuned from the mean-field to the short-range universality class. We present details of the model, as well as recent applications to some questions of the physics of spin glasses. First, we study the existence of a spin-glass state in an external field. In addition, we discuss the existence of ultrametricity in short-range spin glasses. Finally, because the range of interactions can be changed, the model is a formidable test-bed for optimization algorithms.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Physics and Astronomy Physics and Astronomy (General)