We study the performance of Monte Carlo simulations that sample a broad histogram in energy by determining the mean first-passage time to span the entire energy space of d-dimensional ferromagnetic Ising/Potts models. We first show that flat-histogram Monte Carlo methods with single-spin flip updates such as the Wang-Landau algorithm or the multicanonical method perform suboptimally in comparison to an unbiased Markovian random walk in energy space. For the d = 1, 2, 3 Ising model, the mean first-passage time tau scales with the number of spins N = L(d) as tau proportional N2L(z). The exponent z is found to decrease as the dimensionality d is increased. In the mean-field limit of infinite dimensions we find that z vanishes up to logarithmic corrections. We then demonstrate how the slowdown characterized by z > 0 for finite d can be overcome by two complementary approaches--cluster dynamics in connection with Wang-Landau sampling and the recently developed ensemble optimization technique. Both approaches are found to improve the random walk in energy space so that tau proportional N2 up to logarithmic corrections for the d = 1, 2 Ising model.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevE.72.046704 | DOI Listing |
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