Event
Condensed Matter Seminar: "The memory of sand"
Matthieu Wyart, New York University
Complex systems are characterized by an abundance of meta-stable states. To describe such systems statistically, one must understand how states are sampled,
a difficult task in general when thermal equilibrium does not apply. This problem arises in various fields of science, and here I will focus on a simple example, sand.
Sand can flow until one jammed configuration (among the exponentially many possible ones) is reached. I will argue that these dynamically-accessible configurations are atypical, implying that
in its solid phase sand "remembers" that it was flowing just before it jammed. As a consequence, it is stable, but barely so. I will argue that this marginal stability answers long-standing questions
both on the solid and liquid phase of granular materials, and will discuss tentatively the applicability of this idea to other systems.