Abstract

Slow dynamics in glassy systems is often interpreted as due to thermally activated events between ‘metastable’ states. This emphasises the role of nonperturbative fluctuations, which is especially dramatic when these fluctuations destroy a putative phase transition predicted at the mean-field level. To gain insight into such hard problems, we consider the implementation of a generic back-and-forth process, between microscopic theory and observable behaviour via effective theories, in a toy model that is simple enough to allow for a thorough investigation: the one-dimensional theory at low temperature. We consider two ways of restricting the extent of the fluctuations, which both lead to a nonconvex effective potential (or free energy): either through a finite-size system or by means of a running infrared cutoff within the nonperturbative renormalisation group formalism. We discuss the physical insight one can get and the ways to treat strongly nonperturbative fluctuations in this context.

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