Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin - Mathematisch-Naturwissen­schaft­liche Fakultät - Institut für Physik

Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin | Mathematisch-Naturwissen­schaft­liche Fakultät | Institut für Physik | Kolloquium | Alle Termine | Institutskolloquium: Prof. Dr. Werner Krauth (LPS-ENS Paris und MPIPKS Dresden)

Institutskolloquium: Prof. Dr. Werner Krauth (LPS-ENS Paris und MPIPKS Dresden)

Vortrag zum Thema: "Phase transitions in two dimensions: From the hard-disk model to active systems"
  • Wann 08.05.2018 von 15:15 bis 17:00
  • Wo Lise-Meitner-Haus, Christian-Gerthsen-Hörsaal, Newtonstraße 15, 12489 Berlin
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Institutskolloquium: Prof. Dr. Werner Krauth (Laboratoire de Physique Statistique, École normale supérieure, Paris und Max-Planck-Institut für Physik komplexer Systeme, Dresden) spricht zum Thema "Phase transitions in two dimensions: From the hard-disk model to active systems".

Abstract

The hard-disk model has exerted outstanding influence on computational physics and statistical mechanics. Decades ago, hard disks were the first system to be studied by reversible Markov-chain Monte Carlo methods satisfying the detailed-balance condition and by molecular dynamics. It was in hard disks, through numerical simulations, that a two-dimensional melting transition was first seen to occur even though homogeneous short-range interacting particle systems cannot develop crystalline order. Analysis of the system was made difficult by the absence both of powerful simulation methods and of a clear theoretical picture.

In recent years, we have developed a class of irreversible event-chain Monte Carlo algorithms that violate detailed balance. They realize thermodynamic equilibrium as a steady state with non-vanishing probability flows. A new factorized Metropolis filter turns them into a paradigm for general Monte Carlo calculations. I will show how the resulting algorithm has allowed us to demonstrate that hard disks melt with a first-order transition from the liquid to the hexatic and a continuous transition from the hexatic to the solid. Analogous computations have also lead to our new understanding of two-dimensional melting for soft disks, that has been intensely studied in experiment.

Finally, I will discuss two-dimensional melting on a substrate (as it is realized in skyrmion systems), and for active particles, and will present a very recent application of the event-chain algorithm to Coulomb-type long-range-interacting systems.