Averaging and finite-size analysis for disorder: The Hopfield model
✍ Scribed by Thomas Stiefvater; Klaus-Robert Müller; Reimer Kühn
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1996
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 630 KB
- Volume
- 232
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0378-4371
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✦ Synopsis
A finite-size scaling study of the capacity problem for the Hop field model is presented. Questions of identifying the correct shape of the scaling function, of corrections to finite-size scaling and, in particular, the problem of properly dealing with disorder are carefully addressed. At firstorder phase transitions, like the one considered here, relevant physical quantities typically scale exponentially with system size, and it is argued that in disordered systems reliable information about the phase transition can therefore be obtained only by averaging their logarithm rather than by considering the logarithm of their average -an issue reminiscent of the difference between quenched and annealed disorder, but previously ignored in the problem at hand. Our data for the Hopfield model yield ct¢ = 0.141 -4-0.0015. They are thus closer to the results of a recent oneand two-step replica symmetry breaking (RSB) analysis, and disagree with that of an earlier one-step RSB study, with those of previous simulations, and with that of a recent paper using an infinite-step RSB scheme.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
Recent field-theoretic predictions of finite-size effects for various thermodynamic quantities near the critical point are compared with new accurate Monte Carlo (MC) data for the L x L x L Ising model obtained from a cluster-algorithm special-purpose computer. Owing to the large size (L = 32,64, 12