42 research outputs found
Casimir versus Helmholtz forces: Exact results
Recently, attention has turned to the issue of the ensemble dependence of
fluctuation induced forces. As a noteworthy example, in systems the
statistical mechanics underlying such forces can be shown to differ in the
constant magnetic canonical ensemble (CE) from those in the
widely-studied constant grand canonical ensemble (GCE). Here, the
counterpart of the Casimir force in the GCE is the \textit{Helmholtz} force in
the CE. Given the difference between the two ensembles for finite systems, it
is reasonable to anticipate that these forces will have, in general, different
behavior for the same geometry and boundary conditions. Here we present some
exact results for both the Casimir and the Helmholtz force in the case of the
one-dimensional Ising model subject to periodic and antiperiodic boundary
conditions and compare their behavior. We note that the Ising model has
recently being solved in Phys.Rev. E {\bf 106} L042103(2022), using a
combinatorial approach, for the case of fixed value of its order parameter.
Here we derive exact result for the partition function of the one-dimensional
Ising model of spins and fixed value using the transfer matrix method
(TMM); earlier results obtained via the TMM were limited to and even.
As a byproduct, we derive several specific integral representations of the
hypergeometric function of Gauss. Using those results, we rigorously derive
that the free energies of the CE and grand GCE are related to each other via
Legendre transformation in the thermodynamic limit, and establish the leading
finite-size corrections for the canonical case, which turn out to be much more
pronounced than the corresponding ones in the case of the GCE.Comment: 33 pages, 7 figures. The derivations in Appendix C are simplifie
Finite-size effects in the spherical model of finite thickness
A detailed analysis of the finite-size effects on the bulk critical behaviour
of the -dimensional mean spherical model confined to a film geometry with
finite thickness is reported. Along the finite direction different kinds of
boundary conditions are applied: periodic , antiperiodic and free
surfaces with Dirichlet , Neumann and a combination of Neumann and
Dirichlet on both surfaces. A systematic method for the evaluation of
the finite-size corrections to the free energy for the different types of
boundary conditions is proposed. The free energy density and the equation for
the spherical field are computed for arbitrary . It is found, for ,
that the singular part of the free energy has the required finite-size scaling
form at the bulk critical temperature only for and . For the
remaining boundary conditions the standard finite-size scaling hypothesis is
not valid. At , the critical amplitude of the singular part of the free
energy (related to the so called Casimir amplitude) is estimated. We obtain
, and
, implying a fluctuation--induced attraction between
the surfaces for and repulsion in the other two cases. For and
we find a logarithmic dependence on .Comment: Version published in J. Phys. A: Math. Theo
On the finite-size behavior of systems with asymptotically large critical shift
Exact results of the finite-size behavior of the susceptibility in
three-dimensional mean spherical model films under Dirichlet-Dirichlet,
Dirichlet-Neumann and Neumann-Neumann boundary conditions are presented. The
corresponding scaling functions are explicitly derived and their asymptotics
close to, above and below the bulk critical temperature are obtained. The
results can be incorporated in the framework of the finite-size scaling theory
where the exponent characterizing the shift of the finite-size
critical temperature with respect to is smaller than , with
being the critical exponent of the bulk correlation length.Comment: 24 pages, late
Charge and Density Fluctuations Lock Horns : Ionic Criticality with Power-Law Forces
How do charge and density fluctuations compete in ionic fluids near
gas-liquid criticality when quantum mechanical effects play a role ? To gain
some insight, long-range
interactions (with ), that encompass van der Waals forces (when
), have been incorporated in exactly soluble, -dimensional
1:1 ionic spherical models with charges and hard-core repulsions. In
accord with previous work, when (and is not too
large), the Coulomb interactions do not alter the () critical
universality class that is characterized by density correlations at criticality
decaying as with . But screening
is now algebraic, the charge-charge correlations decaying, in general, only as
; thus faithfully mimics known
\textit{non}critical quantal effects. But in the \textit{absence} of full
() ion symmetry, density and charge fluctuations mix via a transparent
mechanism: then the screening \textit{at criticality} is \textit{weaker} by a
factor . Furthermore, the otherwise valid Stillinger-Lovett sum
rule fails \textit{at} criticality whenever (as, e.g., when
) although it remains valid if (as for or in
real Ising-type systems).Comment: 8 pages, in press in J. Phys. A, Letters to the Edito
Excess free energy and Casimir forces in systems with long-range interactions of van-der-Waals type: General considerations and exact spherical-model results
We consider systems confined to a -dimensional slab of macroscopic lateral
extension and finite thickness that undergo a continuous bulk phase
transition in the limit and are describable by an O(n) symmetrical
Hamiltonian. Periodic boundary conditions are applied across the slab. We study
the effects of long-range pair interactions whose potential decays as as , with and , on
the Casimir effect at and near the bulk critical temperature ,
for . For the scaled reduced Casimir force per unit cross-sectional
area, we obtain the form L^{d} {\mathcal F}_C/k_BT \approx \Xi_0(L/\xi_\infty)
+ g_\omega L^{-\omega}\Xi\omega(L/\xi_\infty) + g_\sigma L^{-\omega_\sigm a}
\Xi_\sigma(L \xi_\infty). The contribution decays for
algebraically in rather than exponentially, and hence
becomes dominant in an appropriate regime of temperatures and . We derive
exact results for spherical and Gaussian models which confirm these findings.
In the case , which includes that of nonretarded van-der-Waals
interactions in dimensions, the power laws of the corrections to scaling
of the spherical model are found to get modified by logarithms.
Using general RG ideas, we show that these logarithmic singularities originate
from the degeneracy that occurs for the spherical
model when , in conjunction with the dependence of .Comment: 28 RevTeX pages, 12 eps figures, submitted to PR
Casimir force in O(n) lattice models with a diffuse interface
On the example of the spherical model we study, as a function of the
temperature , the behavior of the Casimir force in O(n) systems with a
diffuse interface and slab geometry , where is
the dimensionality of the system. We consider a system with nearest-neighbor
anisotropic interaction constants parallel to the film and
across it. The model represents the limit of O(n) models
with antiperiodic boundary conditions applied across the finite dimension
of the film. We observe that the Casimir amplitude of the anisotropic -dimensional system is
related to that one of the isotropic system via
. For we find the exact Casimir amplitude , as well as the exact scaling functions of
the Casimir force and of the helicity modulus . We obtain that
, where is the critical temperature of the
bulk system. We find that the effect of the helicity is thus strong that the
Casimir force is repulsive in the whole temperature region.Comment: 15 pages, 3 figure
Simplicial complex entropy.
We propose an entropy function for simplicial complices. Its value gives the expected cost of the optimal encoding of sequences of vertices of the complex, when any two vertices belonging to the same simplex are indistinguishable. We focus on the computational properties of the entropy function, showing that it can be computed efficiently. Several examples over complices consisting of hundreds of simplices show that the proposed entropy function can be used in the analysis of large sequences of simplicial complices that often appear in computational topology applications
Critical dynamics in thin films
Critical dynamics in film geometry is analyzed within the field-theoretical
approach. In particular we consider the case of purely relaxational dynamics
(Model A) and Dirichlet boundary conditions, corresponding to the so-called
ordinary surface universality class on both confining boundaries. The general
scaling properties for the linear response and correlation functions and for
dynamic Casimir forces are discussed. Within the Gaussian approximation we
determine the analytic expressions for the associated universal scaling
functions and study quantitatively in detail their qualitative features as well
as their various limiting behaviors close to the bulk critical point. In
addition we consider the effects of time-dependent fields on the
fluctuation-induced dynamic Casimir force and determine analytically the
corresponding universal scaling functions and their asymptotic behaviors for
two specific instances of instantaneous perturbations. The universal aspects of
nonlinear relaxation from an initially ordered state are also discussed
emphasizing the different crossovers that occur during this evolution. The
model considered is relevant to the critical dynamics of actual uniaxial
ferromagnetic films with symmetry-preserving conditions at the confining
surfaces and for Monte Carlo simulations of spin system with Glauber dynamics
and free boundary conditions.Comment: 64 pages, 21 figure
Scaling and nonscaling finite-size effects in the Gaussian and the mean spherical model with free boundary conditions
We calculate finite-size effects of the Gaussian model in a L\times \tilde
L^{d-1} box geometry with free boundary conditions in one direction and
periodic boundary conditions in d-1 directions for 2<d<4. We also consider film
geometry (\tilde L \to \infty). Finite-size scaling is found to be valid for
d3 but logarithmic deviations from finite-size scaling are found for
the free energy and energy density at the Gaussian upper borderline dimension
d* =3. The logarithms are related to the vanishing critical exponent
1-\alpha-\nu=(d-3)/2 of the Gaussian surface energy density. The latter has a
cusp-like singularity in d>3 dimensions. We show that these properties are the
origin of nonscaling finite-size effects in the mean spherical model with free
boundary conditions in d>=3 dimensions. At bulk T_c in d=3 dimensions we find
an unexpected non-logarithmic violation of finite-size scaling for the
susceptibility \chi \sim L^3 of the mean spherical model in film geometry
whereas only a logarithmic deviation \chi\sim L^2 \ln L exists for box
geometry. The result for film geometry is explained by the existence of the
lower borderline dimension d_l = 3, as implied by the Mermin-Wagner theorem,
that coincides with the Gaussian upper borderline dimension d*=3. For 3<d<4 we
find a power-law violation of scaling \chi \sim L^{d-1} at bulk T_c for box
geometry and a nonscaling temperature dependence \chi_{surface} \sim \xi^d of
the surface susceptibility above T_c. For 2<d<3 dimensions we show the validity
of universal finite-size scaling for the susceptibility of the mean spherical
model with free boundary conditions for both box and film geometry and
calculate the corresponding universal scaling functions for T>=T_c.Comment: Submitted to Physical Review
Depth Lower Bounds in Stabbing Planes for Combinatorial Principles
Stabbing Planes is a proof system introduced very recently which, informally speaking, extends the DPLL method by branching on integer linear inequalities instead of single variables. The techniques known so far to prove size and depth lower bounds for Stabbing Planes are generalizations of those used for the Cutting Planes proof system established via communication complexity arguments. Rank lower bounds for Cutting Planes are also obtained by geometric arguments called protection lemmas. In this work we introduce two new geometric approaches to prove size/depth lower bounds in Stabbing Planes working for any formula: (1) the antichain method, relying on Sperner’s Theorem and (2) the covering method which uses results on essential coverings of the boolean cube by linear polynomials, which in turn relies on Alon’s combinatorial Nullenstellensatz. We demonstrate their use on classes of combinatorial principles such as the Pigeonhole principle, the Tseitin contradictions and the Linear Ordering Principle. By the first method we prove almost linear size lower bounds and optimal logarithmic depth lower bounds for the Pigeonhole principle and analogous lower bounds for the Tseitin contradictions over the complete graph and for the Linear Ordering Principle. By the covering method we obtain a superlinear size lower bound and a logarithmic depth lower bound for Stabbing Planes proof of Tseitin contradictions over a grid graph