Non-Gaussian tail in the force distribution: a hallmark of correlated disorder in the host media of elastic objects

  • Jazmín Aragón Sánchez
  • , Gonzalo Rumi
  • , Raúl Cortés Maldonado
  • , Néstor René Cejas Bolecek
  • , Joaquín Puig
  • , Pablo Pedrazzini
  • , Gladys Nieva
  • , Moira I. Dolz
  • , Marcin Konczykowski
  • , Cornelis J. van der Beek
  • , Alejandro B. Kolton
  • , Yanina Fasano

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Inferring the nature of disorder in the media where elastic objects are nucleated is of crucial importance for many applications but remains a challenging basic-science problem. Here we propose a method to discern whether weak-point or strong-correlated disorder dominates based on characterizing the distribution of the interaction forces between objects mapped in large fields-of-view. We illustrate our proposal with the case-study system of vortex structures nucleated in type-II superconductors with different pinning landscapes. Interaction force distributions are computed from individual vortex positions imaged in thousands-vortices fields-of-view in a two-orders-of-magnitude-wide vortex-density range. Vortex structures nucleated in point-disordered media present Gaussian distributions of the interaction force components. In contrast, if the media have dilute and randomly-distributed correlated disorder, these distributions present non-Gaussian algebraically-decaying tails for large force magnitudes. We propose that detecting this deviation from the Gaussian behavior is a fingerprint of strong disorder, in our case originated from a dilute distribution of correlated pinning centers.

Original languageEnglish
Article number19452
JournalScientific Reports
Volume10
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Dec 2020
Externally publishedYes

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