Coarsening of two dimensional XY model with Hamiltonian dynamics: Logarithmically divergent vortex mobility
Abstract
We investigate the coarsening kinetics of an XY model defined on a square lattice when the underlying dynamics is governed by energy-conserving Hamiltonian equation of motion. We find that the apparent super-diffusive growth of the length scale can be interpreted as the vortex mobility diverging logarithmically in the size of the vortex-antivortex pair, where the time dependence of the characteristic length scale can be fitted as L(t) ((t+t0) (t+t0))1/2 with a finite offset time t0. This interpretation is based on a simple phenomenological model of vortex-antivortex annihilation to explain the growth of the coarsening length scale L(t). The nonequilibrium spin autocorrelation function A(t) and the growing length scale L(t) are related by A(t) L-λ(t) with a distinctive exponent of λ 2.21 (for E=0.4) possibly reflecting the strong effect of propagating spin wave modes. We also investigate the nonequilibrium relaxation (NER) of the system under sudden heating of the system from a perfectly ordered state to the regime of quasi-long-range order, which provides a very accurate estimation of the equilibrium correlation exponent η (E) for a given energy E. We find that both the equal-time spatial correlation Cnr(r,t) and the NER autocorrelation Anr(t) exhibit scaling features consistent with the dynamic exponent of znr = 1.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.