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We develop a field-theoretic perturbation method preserving the fluctuation-dissipation relation (FDR) for the dynamics of the density fluctuations of a noninteracting colloidal gas plunged in a quenched Gaussian random field. It is based on an expansion about the Brownian noninteracting gas and can be considered and justified as a low-disorder or high-temperature expansion. The first-order bare theory yields the same memory integral as the mode-coupling theory (MCT) developed for (ideal) fluids in random environments, apart from the bare nature of the correlation functions involved. It predicts an ergodic dynamical behavior for the relaxation of the density fluctuations, in which the memory kernels and correlation functions develop long-time algebraic tails. A FDR-consistent renormalized theory is also constructed from the bare theory. It is shown to display a dynamic ergodic-nonergodic transition similar to the one predicted by the MCT at the level of the density fluctuations, but, at variance with the MCT, the transition does not fully carry over to the self-diffusion, which always reaches normal diffusive behavior at long time, in agreement with known rigorous results.
We construct a dynamical field theory for noninteracting Brownian particles in the presence of a quenched Gaussian random potential. The main variable for the field theory is the density fluctuation which measures the difference between the local den
We investigate thermodynamic phase transitions of the joint presence of spin glass (SG) and random field (RF) using a random graph model that allows us to deal with the quenched disorder. Therefore, the connectivity becomes a controllable parameter i
Spin glasses are a longstanding model for the sluggish dynamics that appears at the glass transition. However, spin glasses differ from structural glasses for a crucial feature: they enjoy a time reversal symmetry. This symmetry can be broken by appl
We study the phase ordering dynamics of a two dimensional model colloidal solid using molecular dynamics simulations. The colloid particles interact with each other with a Hamaker potential modified by the presence of equatorial patches of attractive
We study the localization length of a pair of two attractively bound particles moving in a one-dimensional random potential. We show in which way it depends on the interaction potential between the constituents of this composite particle. For a pair