Nonmonotonic Aging and Memory Retention in Disordered Mechanical Systems
Abstract
We observe non-monotonic aging and memory effects, two hallmarks of glassy dynamics, in two disordered mechanical systems: crumpled thin sheets and elastic foams. Under fixed compression, both systems exhibit monotonic non-exponential relaxation. However, when after a certain waiting time the compression is partially reduced, both systems exhibit a non-monotonic response: the normal force first increases over many minutes or even hours until reaching a peak value, and only then relaxation is resumed. The peak-time scales linearly with the waiting time, indicating that these systems retain long-lasting memory of previous conditions. Our results and the measured scaling relations are in good agreement with a theoretical model recently used to describe observations of monotonic aging in several glassy systems, suggesting that the non-monotonic behavior may be generic and that a-thermal systems can show genuine glassy behavior.
Cite
@article{arxiv.1608.02429,
title = {Nonmonotonic Aging and Memory Retention in Disordered Mechanical Systems},
author = {Yoav Lahini and Omer Gottesman and Ariel Amir and Shmuel M. Rubinstein},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1608.02429},
year = {2017}
}
Comments
5 pages, 5 figures