1) The Aizenman-Wehr construction, a canonical ensemble approach,
constructs the metastate through an ensemble of states obtained by varying
the random parameters in the Hamiltonian outside of the volume being
considered.[2]
It was proved[4] for Euclidean lattices that there always
exists a deterministic subsequence along which the Newman-Stein and
Aizenman-Wehr constructions result in the same metastate. The metastate is
especially useful in systems where deterministic sequences of volumes fail
to converge to a thermodynamic state, and/or there are many competing
observable thermodynamic states.
As an alternative usage, "metastate" can refer to thermodynamic states, where the system is in a metastable state (for example superheated or undercooled liquids, when the actual temperature of the liquid is above or below the boiling or freezing temperature, but the material is still in a liquid state).[5][6]
^ abNewman, Charles M.; Stein, Daniel L. (1998). "Thermodynamic Chaos and the Structure of Short-Range Spin Glasses". Mathematical Aspects of Spin Glasses and Neural Networks. Boston, MA: Birkhäuser Boston. pp. 243–287. doi:10.1007/978-1-4612-4102-7_7. ISBN978-1-4612-8653-0.
^Debenedetti, P.G.Metastable Liquids: Concepts and Principles; Princeton University Press: Princeton, NJ, USA, 1996.