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Directed polymers in a random medium

After a brief introduction to the problem of directed polymers in a random medium, several aspects of the problem are addressed in more detail. It is possible to show that, in high enough dimension and above a certain temperature, a phase exists in which the free energy is given by the annealed free energy, with probability one. The proof of this statement is extended to obtain upper and lower bounds on the temperature transition between this phase and a low temperature phase and hence prove the existence of the phase transition. The mean field solution is reviewed and a method of obtaining high dimension expansions around it is presented. The method uses the idea of 'n-tree approximations' as a systematic way of including the correlations present in finite dimensions. Using this approach 1/d expansions are obtained for the free energy, transition temperature, transverse fluctuations and overlaps. The results are consistent with the existence of a finite upper critical dimension above which the behaviour is of a mean field nature. Directed polymers are then considered on disordered hierarchical lattices. On these lattices the problem reduces to the study of the stable laws that occur when one combines random variables in a nonlinear way. Recursion relations for various properties of the system are obtained which are studied using numerical and analytical techniques. It is possible to obtain a perturbative expansion for the free energy, overlaps and non-integer moments of the partition function. Finally, a generalisation of the standard directed polymer problem is considered, in which one allows the walks to contribute positive and negative weights to the partition sum. The solution of the mean field limit of this problem is obtained indirectly, by using the relationship between the mean field directed polymer problem, the random energy model (REM) and the generalised random energy model (GREM). Numerical simultions are presented which give good confirmation of the analytical predictions. It is observed that in solving this generalised polymer problem one has also obtained a formula for the largest Lyapounov exponent of a product of large, sparse random matrices.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:bl.uk/oai:ethos.bl.uk:643397
Date January 1990
CreatorsCook, Joanna
PublisherUniversity of Edinburgh
Source SetsEthos UK
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeElectronic Thesis or Dissertation
Sourcehttp://hdl.handle.net/1842/12001

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