Skip to content. | Skip to navigation

Personal tools

Sections

UMR 5672

logo de l'ENS de Lyon
logo du CNRS
You are here: Home / Seminars / Other seminars / Levy flight in mayonnaise

Levy flight in mayonnaise

Matthieu Wyart (EPFL, Lausanne)
When Apr 01, 2016
from 10:45 to 12:00
Where Centre Blaise Pascal
Attendees Matthieu Wyart
Add event to calendar vCal
iCal

Glassy systems with long-range interactions often present avalanche type-response under slow driving, as well as a vanishing density of excitation at low energy or “pseudo gap”. I will explain why these facts must come together,  and discuss in particular the plasticity of amorphous solids (for example, how does a mayonnaise flow when one slowly pushes it with a spoon). In that case a pseudo-gap characterizes the density of vibrational modes that  are close to a saddle node bifurcation. I will argue that the mean-field description of plasticity maps into the problem of Levy Flights near an absorbing boundary. Using this analogy I will show  that the pseudo-gap  exponent characterizing the solid stability is  not universal, except when the applied stress is zero, and depends non-monotonically on the stress level. If time permit, I will discuss a scaling description of the liquid phase above the yield stress, connections to other type of glassy systems (spin, hard spheres and electron glasses), as well as open questions.

More information about this event…