par Chakhmakhchyan, Levon ;Teles, Tarcísio T.N.;Ruffo, Stefano
Référence Journal of Statistical Mechanics: Theory and Experiment, 2017, 6, 063204
Publication Publié, 2017-06
Article révisé par les pairs
Résumé : Ensemble inequivalence has been previously displayed only for long-range interacting systems with non-extensive energy. In order to perform the thermodynamic limit, such systems require an unphysical, so-called, Kac rescaling of the coupling constant. We here study models defined on long-range random networks, which avoid such a rescaling. The proposed models have an extensive energy, which is however non-additive. For such long-range random networks, pairs of sites are coupled with a probability decaying with the distance r as . In one dimension and with , the surface energy scales linearly with the network size, while for it is O(1). By performing numerical simulations, we show that a negative specific heat region is present in the microcanonical ensemble of a Blume-Capel model, in correspondence with a first-order phase transition in the canonical one. This proves that ensemble inequivalence is a consequence of non-additivity rather than non-extensivity. Moreover, since a mean-field coupling is absent in such networks, relaxation to equilibrium takes place on an intensive time scale and quasi-stationary states are absent.