Simulations and crumpled-matter experiments reveal that thermal avalanches in logarithmic creep have a hierarchical spatio-temporal structure in which fast compact cascades facilitate subsequent activations via noise-mediated correlations, producing heavy-tailed temporal statistics.
Spatiotemporal Hierarchy of Slow Avalanches During Creep
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abstract
Far from equilibrium, amorphous solids exhibit structural relaxations that span a vast range of timescales such as physical aging and creep. Recently, it has been shown that such relaxations are driven by via intermittent, scale-free, yet anomalously slow cascades of local rearrangements, termed 'thermal avalanches.' Here, we investigate the spatio-temporal dynamics of these avalanches during logarithmic creep, using simulations of a model amorphous solid. By systematically disentangling mechanical and thermal activation events, we reveal that thermal avalanches have a hierarchical spatio-temporal structure: localized rearrangement events group into fast and compact cascades, which then promote the thermal activation of subsequent cascades via long-range, noise-mediated facilitation. This process results in heavy-tailed temporal correlations reminiscent of seismic activity. We validate these findings using experiments on slow relaxation of crumpled matter. Our work provides a framework for identifying noise-mediated correlations and elucidates the rich structural dynamics underlying slow relaxation of amorphous solids.
fields
cond-mat.soft 1years
2025 1verdicts
UNVERDICTED 1representative citing papers
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Spatiotemporal Hierarchy of Slow Avalanches During Creep
Simulations and crumpled-matter experiments reveal that thermal avalanches in logarithmic creep have a hierarchical spatio-temporal structure in which fast compact cascades facilitate subsequent activations via noise-mediated correlations, producing heavy-tailed temporal statistics.