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What happens when disorder crashes a critical surface?

António Antunes, Apratim Kaviraj, Baishali Roy

May 21, 2026

The Ising model at its critical point—where ferromagnets transition between ordered and disordered—usually respects clean boundary rules. Adding randomness to a surface-embedded magnetic field doesn't destroy the standard boundary condition, but reveals a second, exotic phase lurking beneath. The researchers mapped this "dirty" defect using replica methods and traced how its logarithmic structure emerges from disorder.
Published as Ising surface defects can get dirty arXiv:2605.22628
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