Phys. Rev. E 59, 2571 - 2577 (1999)

Computational complexity of determining the barriers to interface motion in random systems

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A. Alan Middleton
Department of Physics, Syracuse University, Syracuse, New York 13244

Received 28 July 1998

The low-temperature driven or thermally activated motion of several condensed matter systems is often modeled by the dynamics of interfaces (co-dimension-1 elastic manifolds) subject to a random potential. Two characteristic quantitative features of the energy landscape of such a many-degree-of-freedom system are the ground-state energy and the magnitude of the energy barriers between given configurations. While the numerical determination of the former can be accomplished in time polynomial in the system size, it is shown here that the problem of determining the latter quantity is nondeterministic polynomial time complete. Exact computation of barriers is therefore (almost certainly) much more difficult than determining the exact ground states of interfaces.


©1999 The American Physical Society

URL: http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevE.59.2571
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevE.59.2571
PACS: 05.45.-a, 05.70.Ln, 02.70.Lq, 75.10.Nr

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