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In
statistical mechanics In physics, statistical mechanics is a mathematical framework that applies statistical methods and probability theory to large assemblies of microscopic entities. Sometimes called statistical physics or statistical thermodynamics, its applicati ...
, a universality class is a collection of
mathematical model A mathematical model is an abstract and concrete, abstract description of a concrete system using mathematics, mathematical concepts and language of mathematics, language. The process of developing a mathematical model is termed ''mathematical m ...
s which share a single scale-invariant limit under the process of
renormalization group In theoretical physics, the renormalization group (RG) is a formal apparatus that allows systematic investigation of the changes of a physical system as viewed at different scales. In particle physics, it reflects the changes in the underlying p ...
flow. While the models within a class may differ dramatically at finite scales, their behavior will become increasingly similar as the limit scale is approached. In particular,
asymptotic In analytic geometry, an asymptote () of a curve is a line such that the distance between the curve and the line approaches zero as one or both of the ''x'' or ''y'' coordinates Limit of a function#Limits at infinity, tends to infinity. In pro ...
phenomena such as critical exponents will be the same for all models in the class. Some well-studied universality classes are the ones containing the
Ising model The Ising model (or Lenz–Ising model), named after the physicists Ernst Ising and Wilhelm Lenz, is a mathematical models in physics, mathematical model of ferromagnetism in statistical mechanics. The model consists of discrete variables that r ...
or the
percolation theory In statistical physics and mathematics, percolation theory describes the behavior of a network when nodes or links are added. This is a geometric type of phase transition, since at a critical fraction of addition the network of small, disconnected ...
at their respective
phase transition In physics, chemistry, and other related fields like biology, a phase transition (or phase change) is the physical process of transition between one state of a medium and another. Commonly the term is used to refer to changes among the basic Sta ...
points; these are both families of classes, one for each lattice dimension. Typically, a family of universality classes will have a lower and upper
critical dimension In the renormalization group analysis of phase transitions in physics, a critical dimension is the dimensionality of space at which the character of the phase transition changes. Below the lower critical dimension there is no phase transition. ...
: below the lower critical dimension, the universality class becomes degenerate (this dimension is 2d for the Ising model, or for directed percolation, but 1d for undirected percolation), and above the upper critical dimension the critical exponents stabilize and can be calculated by an analog of
mean-field theory In physics and probability theory, Mean-field theory (MFT) or Self-consistent field theory studies the behavior of high-dimensional random (stochastic) models by studying a simpler model that approximates the original by averaging over Degrees of ...
(this dimension is 4d for Ising or for directed percolation, and 6d for undirected percolation).


List of critical exponents

Critical exponents are defined in terms of the variation of certain physical properties of the system near its phase transition point. These physical properties will include its
reduced temperature In thermodynamics, the reduced properties of a fluid are a set of state variables scaled by the fluid's state properties at its critical point. These dimensionless thermodynamic coordinates, taken together with a substance's compressibility fact ...
\tau, its order parameter measuring how much of the system is in the "ordered" phase, the
specific heat In thermodynamics, the specific heat capacity (symbol ) of a substance is the amount of heat that must be added to one unit of mass of the substance in order to cause an increase of one unit in temperature. It is also referred to as massic heat ...
, and so on. *The exponent \alpha is the exponent relating the specific heat C to the reduced temperature: we have C = \tau^. The specific heat will usually be singular at the critical point, but the minus sign in the definition of \alpha allows it to remain positive. *The exponent \beta relates the order parameter \Psi to the temperature. Unlike most critical exponents it is assumed positive, since the order parameter will usually be zero at the critical point. So we have \Psi = , \tau, ^. *The exponent \gamma relates the temperature with the system's response to an external driving force, or source field. We have d\Psi/dJ = \tau^, with J the driving force. *The exponent \delta relates the order parameter to the source field at the critical temperature, where this relationship becomes nonlinear. We have J = \Psi^\delta (hence \Psi = J^), with the same meanings as before. *The exponent \nu relates the size of correlations (i.e. patches of the ordered phase) to the temperature; away from the critical point these are characterized by a
correlation length In statistics, correlation or dependence is any statistical relationship, whether causal or not, between two random variables or bivariate data. Although in the broadest sense, "correlation" may indicate any type of association, in statistics ...
\xi. We have \xi = \tau^. *The exponent \eta measures the size of correlations at the critical temperature. It is defined so that the correlation function scales as r^. *The exponent \sigma, used in
percolation theory In statistical physics and mathematics, percolation theory describes the behavior of a network when nodes or links are added. This is a geometric type of phase transition, since at a critical fraction of addition the network of small, disconnected ...
, measures the size of the largest clusters (roughly, the largest ordered blocks) at 'temperatures' (connection probabilities) below the critical point. So s_ \sim (p_c - p)^. *The exponent \tau, also from
percolation theory In statistical physics and mathematics, percolation theory describes the behavior of a network when nodes or links are added. This is a geometric type of phase transition, since at a critical fraction of addition the network of small, disconnected ...
, measures the number of size ''s'' clusters far from s_ (or the number of clusters at criticality): n_s \sim s^ f(s/s_), with the f factor removed at critical probability. For symmetries, the group listed gives the symmetry of the order parameter. The group \mathrm_n is the
dihedral group In mathematics, a dihedral group is the group (mathematics), group of symmetry, symmetries of a regular polygon, which includes rotational symmetry, rotations and reflection symmetry, reflections. Dihedral groups are among the simplest example ...
, the symmetry group of the ''n''-gon, S_n is the ''n''-element
symmetric group In abstract algebra, the symmetric group defined over any set is the group whose elements are all the bijections from the set to itself, and whose group operation is the composition of functions. In particular, the finite symmetric grou ...
, \mathrm is the octahedral group, and O(n) is the
orthogonal group In mathematics, the orthogonal group in dimension , denoted , is the Group (mathematics), group of isometry, distance-preserving transformations of a Euclidean space of dimension that preserve a fixed point, where the group operation is given by ...
in ''n'' dimensions. 1 is the
trivial group In mathematics, a trivial group or zero group is a group that consists of a single element. All such groups are isomorphic, so one often speaks of the trivial group. The single element of the trivial group is the identity element and so it is usu ...
.


References


External links


Universality classes
from Sklogwiki * Zinn-Justin, Jean (2002). ''Quantum field theory and critical phenomena'', Oxford, Clarendon Press (2002), * * {{cite journal, arxiv=cond-mat/9701018, doi=10.1088/0305-4470/30/24/036, title=Critical Exponents of the Four-State Potts Model, year=1997, last1=Creswick, first1=Richard J., last2=Kim, first2=Seung-Yeon, journal=Journal of Physics A: Mathematical and General, volume=30, issue=24, pages=8785–8786, s2cid=16687747 Critical phenomena Renormalization group Scale-invariant systems