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Transient responses in disordered systems typically show a heavy-tail relaxation behavior: the decay time constant increases as time increases, revealing a spectral distribution of time constants. The asymptotic value of such transients is notoriously difficult to experimentally measure due to the increasing decay time-scale. However, if the heavy-tail transient is plotted versus log-time, a reduced set of data around the inflection point of such a plot is sufficient for an accurate fit. From a derivative plot in log-time, the peak height, position, line width, and, most importantly, skewness are all that is needed to accurately predict the asymptotic value of various heavy-tail decay models to within less than a percent. This curve fitting strategy reduces by orders of magnitude the amount of experimental data required, and clearly identifies a threshold below which the amount of data is insufficient to distinguish various models. The skew normal spectral fit and dispersive diffusion transient fit are proposed as four-parameter fits, with the latter including the stretched exponential as a limiting case. The line fit and asymptotic prediction are demonstrated using experimental transient responses in previously published amorphous silicon and amorphous InGaZnO data.
This paper studies the set of equivalent realizations of isostatic frameworks in two dimensions, and algorithms for finding all such realizations. We show that an isostatic framework has an even number of equivalent realizations that preserve edge le
The nature of the amorphous state has been notably difficult to ascertain at the microscopic level. In addition to the fundamental importance of understanding the amorphous state, potential changes to amorphous structures as a result of radiation dam
Below the melting temperature $T_m$ crystals are the stable phase of typical elemental or molecular systems. However, cooling down a liquid below $T_m$, crystallization is anything but inevitable. The liquid can be supercooled, eventually forming a g
The local order units of dense simple liquid are typically three dimensional (close packed) clusters: hcp, fcc and icosahedrons. We show that the fluid demonstrates the superstable tetrahedral local order up to temperatures several orders of magnitud
We introduce a simple nearest-neighbor spin model with multiple metastable phases, the number and decay pathways of which are explicitly controlled by the parameters of the system. With this model we can construct, for example, a system which evolves