arXiv:2309.13126 [cond-mat.stat-mech]AbstractReferencesReviewsResources
Stretched-exponential relaxation in weakly-confined Brownian systems through large deviation theory
Lucianno Defaveri, Eli Barkai, David A. Kessler
Published 2023-09-22Version 1
Stretched-exponential relaxation is a widely observed phenomenon found in glassy systems. It was previously modeled with non-Markovian dynamics reflecting a memory effect. Here, we study a Brownian particle under the influence of a confining, albeit weak, potential field that grows with distance as a sub-linear power law. We find that for this memoryless model, observables display stretched-exponential relaxation. The probability density function of the system is studied using a rate function ansatz. We obtain analytically the stretched-exponential exponent along with an anomalous power-law scaling of length with time. The rate function exhibits a point of nonanalyticity, indicating a dynamical phase transition. In particular, the rate function is double-valued both to the left and right of this point, leading to four different rate functions, depending on the choice of initial conditions and symmetry.