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author | Jaron Kent-Dobias <jaron@kent-dobias.com> | 2022-06-30 20:48:29 +0200 |
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committer | Jaron Kent-Dobias <jaron@kent-dobias.com> | 2022-06-30 20:48:29 +0200 |
commit | 03de8ceab441fddaba727f2bcd362275f6ced11e (patch) | |
tree | 53035c8b6b3e03fcd174243a87c656a85ea50518 /frsb_kac-rice.tex | |
parent | b353ec93c1161e1619e068a8830f3db7ec5ba520 (diff) | |
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More interpretation work.
Diffstat (limited to 'frsb_kac-rice.tex')
-rw-r--r-- | frsb_kac-rice.tex | 20 |
1 files changed, 14 insertions, 6 deletions
diff --git a/frsb_kac-rice.tex b/frsb_kac-rice.tex index 130738d..a01d803 100644 --- a/frsb_kac-rice.tex +++ b/frsb_kac-rice.tex @@ -315,8 +315,7 @@ We introduce new fields R_{ab}=-i\frac1N\hat s_a\cdot s_b && D_{ab}=\frac1N\hat s_a\cdot\hat s_b \end{align} -$C_{ab}$ is the overlap between spins belonging to different replicas. - +Their physical meaning is explained in \S\ref{sec:interpretation}. By substituting these parameters into the expressions above and then making a change of variables in the integration from $s_a$ and $\hat s_a$ to these three matrices, we arrive at the form for the complexity @@ -636,6 +635,7 @@ Here a picture of $\chi$ vs $C$ or $X$ vs $C$ showing limits $q_{max}$, $x_{max} for different energies and typical vs minima. \section{Interpretation} +\label{sec:interpretation} Let $\langle A\rangle$ be the average of $A$ over stationary points with given $E$ and $\mu$, i.e., \begin{equation} @@ -649,20 +649,28 @@ with d\nu(s)=ds\,\delta(NE-H(s))\delta(\partial H(s)+\mu s)|\det(\partial\partial H(s)+\mu I)| \end{equation} the Kac--Rice measure. The fields $C$, $R$, and $D$ defined in -\eqref{eq:fields} can be related to certain averages of this type. First, +\eqref{eq:fields} can be related to certain averages of this type. + +\subsection{\textit{C}: distribution of overlaps} + +First, consider $C$, which has an interpretation nearly identical to that of Parisi's $Q$ matrix of overlaps. It can be shown that its off-diagonal corresponds to the probability distribution of the overlaps between stationary points $P(q)$. First, define this distribution as \begin{equation} P(q)=\frac1{\mathcal N^2}\sum_{\sigma,\sigma'}\delta\left(\frac{s_\sigma\cdot s_{\sigma'}}N-q\right) \end{equation} -It is straightforward to show that moments of this distribution are related to certain averages of the form +where the sum is twice over stationary points $\sigma$ and $\sigma'$. It is +straightforward to show that moments of this distribution are related to +certain averages of the form \begin{equation} \int dq\,q^p P(q) =q^{(p)} \equiv\frac1{N^p}\sum_{i_1\cdots i_p}\langle s_{i_1}\cdots s_{i_p}\rangle\langle s_{i_1}\cdots s_{i_p}\rangle \end{equation} -In particular, the appeal of Parisi to properties of pure states is unnecessary here, since the stationary points are points. These moments are related to our $C$ by computing their average over disorder: +The appeal of Parisi to properties of pure states is unnecessary here, since +the stationary points are points. These moments are related to our $C$ by +computing their average over disorder: \begin{equation} \begin{aligned} \overline{q^{(p)}} @@ -676,7 +684,7 @@ where $C$ is assumed to take its saddle point value. If we now change variables \begin{equation} \overline{q^{(p)}}=\int dc\,c^p\frac{dx}{dc} \end{equation} -from which we conclude $\overline{P(q)}=\frac{dx}{dc}|_{c=q}$. +from which we conclude $\overline{P(q)}=\frac{dx}{dc}\big|_{c=q}$. With this established, we now address what it means for $C$ to have a nontrivial |