Random Walkers in 1-D Random Environments: Exact Renormalization Group Analysis

Daniel S. Fisher 1, Pierre Le Doussal 2, Cecile Monthus 3

Physical Review E: Statistical, Nonlinear, and Soft Matter Physics 59 (1999) 4795

Sinai\’s model of diffusion in one-dimension with random local bias is studied by a real space renormalization group which yields exact results at long times. The effects of an additional small uniform bias force are also studied. We obtain analytically the scaling form of the distribution of the position $x(t)$ of a particle, the probability of it not returning to the origin and the distributions of first passage times, in an infinite sample as well as in the presence of a boundary and in a finite size sample. We compute the distribution of meeting time of two particles. We also obtain a detailed analytic description of thermally averaged trajectories: we compute the distributions of the number of returns and of the number of jumps forward. They obey multifractal scaling, characterized by generalized persistence exponents $\\theta(g)$ which we compute. With a small bias, the number of returns is finite, characterized by a universal scaling function. The statistics of the successive times of return of thermally averaged trajectories is obtained. The two time distribution of the positions of a particle, $x(t)$ and $x(t\’)$ ($t>t\’$) is computed exactly. It exhibits « aging\’\’ with several regimes: without a bias, for $t-t\’ \\sim t\’^\\alpha, \\alpha > 1$, it exhibits a $(\\ln t)/(\\ln t\’)$ scaling, with a novel singularity at rescaled positions $x(t)=x(t\’)$. For closer times $\\alpha<1$ there is a quasi-equilibrium regime with $\\ln(t-t\')/\\ln t\'$ scaling. The crossover to a $t/t\'$ aging form under a small bias is obtained analytically. Rare events, e.g. splitting of the thermal packet between wells, are also studied. Connections with the Green\'s function of a 1D Schr\\ödinger problem and quantum spin chains are discussed.

  • 1. Lyman Laboratory of Physics,
    University of Harvard
  • 2. Laboratoire de Physique Théorique de l’ENS (LPTENS),
    CNRS : UMR8549 – Université Paris VI – Pierre et Marie Curie – Ecole Normale Supérieure de Paris – ENS Paris
  • 3. Laboratoire de Physique Théorique et Modèles Statistiques (LPTMS),
    CNRS : UMR8626 – Université Paris XI – Paris Sud
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