"Talk on 'introduction to conformal field theory(CFT)'"의 두 판 사이의 차이
3번째 줄: | 3번째 줄: | ||
* scaling and power law | * scaling and power law | ||
* scale invariance and conformal invariance | * scale invariance and conformal invariance | ||
+ | * critical phenomena<br> | ||
+ | ** http://scienceon.hani.co.kr/archives/13339 | ||
+ | ** http://scienceon.hani.co.kr/archives/13941 | ||
+ | ** http://scienceon.hani.co.kr/archives/14664 | ||
18번째 줄: | 22번째 줄: | ||
<h5>critical phenomena</h5> | <h5>critical phenomena</h5> | ||
− | + | * [[critical phenomena]] | |
− | |||
− | * [[ | ||
2011년 1월 26일 (수) 15:35 판
introduction
- scaling and power law
- scale invariance and conformal invariance
- critical phenomena
scale invariacne and power law
Scale Invariance of power law functions
The function y=xp is "scale-invariant" in the following sense. Consider an interval such as (x,2x), where y changes from xp to 2pxp. Now scale x by a scale factor a. We look at the interval (ax,2ax) where y changes from (ax)p to 2p(ax)p. We see that y in this interval is the same (except for a scale change of ap) as y in the unscaled interval.
Most functions do not behave this way. Consider y=exp(x), which goes [from exp(x) to exp(2x)] over the interval (x,2x), and [from exp(ax) to exp(2ax)] in the scaled interval (ax,2ax). There is no scale factor that can be removed from y to make the second interval of y appear the same as the first.
The sum of two different powers is usually not scale invariant. However, special cases may still be. y=Ax2 + Bx can be written as A(x+B/2A)2 -B2/4A. If the new variable X=x+B/2A is scaled to aX, then y(aX)=a2Y(X)+(a2-1)(B2/4A). In other words, the function y(x) is scale invariant (with scaling exponent 2) after finding the right scaling variable X and allowing for a scale-dependent shift of y.
critical phenomena
correlation at large distance
- universality class and critical exponent
- appearance of correlations at large distance, a situation that is encountered in second order phase transitions, near the critical temperature.
- the critical exponent describes the behavior of physical quantities around the critical temperature
e.g. magnetization \(M\sim (T_C-T)^{1/8}\) - magnetization and susceptibility can be written as correlation functions
- large distance behavior of spin at criticality \(\eta=1/4\)
\(<\sigma_{i}\sigma_{i+n}>=\frac{1}{|n|^{\eta}}\) - correlation length critivel exponent \(\nu=1\)
\(<\epsilon_{i}\epsilon_{i+n}>=\frac{1}{|n|^{4-\frac{2}{\nu}}}\)
conformal transformations
- roughly, local dilations
- this is also equivalent to local scale invariance
- correlation functions do not change under conformal transformations
history
encyclopedia
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/
- http://www.scholarpedia.org/
- http://www.proofwiki.org/wiki/
- Princeton companion to mathematics(Companion_to_Mathematics.pdf)
books
- 2010년 books and articles
- http://gigapedia.info/1/
- http://gigapedia.info/1/
- http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_ss_gw?url=search-alias%3Dstripbooks&field-keywords=
expositions
articles
- http://www.ams.org/mathscinet
- http://www.zentralblatt-math.org/zmath/en/
- http://arxiv.org/
- http://www.pdf-search.org/
- http://pythagoras0.springnote.com/
- http://math.berkeley.edu/~reb/papers/index.html
- http://dx.doi.org/
question and answers(Math Overflow)
blogs
- 구글 블로그 검색
- http://ncatlab.org/nlab/show/HomePage
experts on the field