Manta173 said:
Thats actually the most applicable to glass you can get except for specialists. Polymer physicists know more about this than anyone else, but again... what is that second word...physics.... hmmmm... And if you really look into it.... phase transitions are thermodynamic properties... thermo is a physics topic. (although chemists try to figure it out with varying levels of success...)
I'd like to point out that Thermodynamics is just
maths with a little bit of physical intuition; anyone with a grasp of differential equations can derive it (if you mean stat thermo, then that's a completely different kettle of fish, but is still well understood by Chemists at least as well as by physicists).
Whilst physicists may claim to know everything (or at least have theories), it is Chemists that deal with real world problems. Unfortunately, the movement of glass does not happen on any sort of time scale chemists deal with; I have to say the best people to ask would probably be
geologists with the sort of timescales that are required(!)
Oh, and to the poster who said that 'Solids have a regular ordered structure', that's the definition of a
crystal not a solid, solids may be amorphous.