Potential energy landscape picture of zero-temperature avalanche criticality governing dynamics in supercooled liquids

Abstract

Supercooled liquids are metastable states realized by suppressing crystallization below the melting temperature. While it is well established that their dynamics slow down dramatically and become spatially heterogeneous upon cooling, the microscopic origin of these nontrivial glassy phenomena remains a matter of active debate. In the present study, by means of molecular dynamics simulations, we first demonstrate that nontrivial slow dynamics, such as structural relaxation and dynamical heterogeneity, can be consistently described within a zero-temperature avalanche criticality picture. Since this finding suggests that the potential energy landscape plays a crucial role in determining the dynamics, we further quantify the potential energy landscape from three distinct perspectives. Based on these analyses, we propose a potential-energy-landscape picture of avalanche criticality that is consistent with various previous studies. Our proposed picture explains in a unified manner previously unexplained observations near the mode-coupling transition, such as the saturation of the dynamical susceptibility and the localization of unstable modes in saddle configurations.

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