8,479 research outputs found
Critical behaviour of three-dimensional Ising ferromagnets at imperfect surfaces: Bounds on the surface critical exponent
The critical behaviour of three-dimensional semi-infinite Ising ferromagnets
at planar surfaces with (i) random surface-bond disorder or (ii) a terrace of
monatomic height and macroscopic size is considered. The
Griffiths-Kelly-Sherman correlation inequalities are shown to impose
constraints on the order-parameter density at the surface, which yield upper
and lower bounds for the surface critical exponent . If the surface
bonds do not exceed the threshold for supercritical enhancement of the pure
system, these bounds force to take the value of the
latter system's ordinary transition. This explains the robustness of
to such surface imperfections observed in recent Monte Carlo
simulations.Comment: Latex, 4 pages, uses Revtex stylefiles, no figures, accepted EPJB
version, only minor additions and cosmetic change
Renormalized field theory and particle density profile in driven diffusive systems with open boundaries
We investigate the density profile in a driven diffusive system caused by a
plane particle source perpendicular to the driving force. Focussing on the case
of critical bulk density we use a field theoretic renormalization
group approach to calculate the density as a function of the distance
from the particle source at first order in (: spatial
dimension). For we find reasonable agreement with the exact solution
recently obtained for the asymmetric exclusion model. Logarithmic corrections
to the mean field profile are computed for with the result for .Comment: 32 pages, RevTex, 4 Postscript figures, to appear in Phys. Rev.
Boundary critical behaviour at -axial Lifshitz points: the special transition for the case of a surface plane parallel to the modulation axes
The critical behaviour of -dimensional semi-infinite systems with
-component order parameter is studied at an -axial bulk
Lifshitz point whose wave-vector instability is isotropic in an -dimensional
subspace of . Field-theoretic renormalization group methods are
utilised to examine the special surface transition in the case where the
potential modulation axes, with , are parallel to the surface.
The resulting scaling laws for the surface critical indices are given. The
surface critical exponent , the surface crossover exponent
and related ones are determined to first order in
\epsilon=4+\case{m}{2}-d. Unlike the bulk critical exponents and the surface
critical exponents of the ordinary transition, is -dependent already
at first order in . The \Or(\epsilon) term of is
found to vanish, which implies that the difference of and
the bulk exponent is of order .Comment: 21 pages, one figure included as eps file, uses IOP style file
Critical, crossover, and correction-to-scaling exponents for isotropic Lifshitz points to order
A two-loop renormalization group analysis of the critical behaviour at an
isotropic Lifshitz point is presented. Using dimensional regularization and
minimal subtraction of poles, we obtain the expansions of the critical
exponents and , the crossover exponent , as well as the
(related) wave-vector exponent , and the correction-to-scaling
exponent to second order in . These are compared with
the authors' recent -expansion results [{\it Phys. Rev. B} {\bf 62}
(2000) 12338; {\it Nucl. Phys. B} {\bf 612} (2001) 340] for the general case of
an -axial Lifshitz point. It is shown that the expansions obtained here by a
direct calculation for the isotropic () Lifshitz point all follow from the
latter upon setting . This is so despite recent claims to the
contrary by de Albuquerque and Leite [{\it J. Phys. A} {\bf 35} (2002) 1807].Comment: 11 pages, Latex, uses iop stylefiles, some graphs are generated
automatically via texdra
Two-loop renormalization-group analysis of critical behavior at m-axial Lifshitz points
We investigate the critical behavior that d-dimensional systems with
short-range forces and a n-component order parameter exhibit at Lifshitz points
whose wave-vector instability occurs in a m-dimensional isotropic subspace of
. Utilizing dimensional regularization and minimal subtraction
of poles in dimensions, we carry out a two-loop
renormalization-group (RG) analysis of the field-theory models representing the
corresponding universality classes. This gives the beta function
to third order, and the required renormalization factors as well as the
associated RG exponent functions to second order, in u. The coefficients of
these series are reduced to m-dependent expressions involving single integrals,
which for general (not necessarily integer) values of can be
computed numerically, and for special values of m analytically. The
expansions of the critical exponents , , ,
, the wave-vector exponent , and the correction-to-scaling
exponent are obtained to order . These are used to estimate their
values for d=3. The obtained series expansions are shown to encompass both
isotropic limits m=0 and m=d.Comment: 42 pages, 1 figure; to appear in Nuclear Physics B; footnote added,
minor changes in v
Bulk singularities at critical end points: a field-theory analysis
A class of continuum models with a critical end point is considered whose
Hamiltonian involves two densities: a primary
order-parameter field, , and a secondary (noncritical) one, .
Field-theoretic methods (renormalization group results in conjunction with
functional methods) are used to give a systematic derivation of singularities
occurring at critical end points. Specifically, the thermal singularity
of the first-order line on which the disordered or
ordered phase coexists with the noncritical spectator phase, and the
coexistence singularity or of the
secondary density are derived. It is clarified how the renormalization
group (RG) scenario found in position-space RG calculations, in which the
critical end point and the critical line are mapped onto two separate fixed
points and
translates into field theory. The critical RG eigenexponents of and are shown to match.
is demonstrated to have a discontinuity
eigenperturbation (with eigenvalue ), tangent to the unstable trajectory
that emanates from and leads to . The nature and origin of this eigenperturbation as well as the
role redundant operators play are elucidated. The results validate that the
critical behavior at the end point is the same as on the critical line.Comment: Latex file; uses epj stylefiles svepj.clo and svjour.cls. Two eps
files as figures included; uses texdraw to generate some figures Only some
remarks added in last Section of this final versio
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