In various statistical-mechanical models the introduction of a metric onto
the space of parameters (e.g. the temperature variable, β, and the
external field variable, h, in the case of spin models) gives an alternative
perspective on the phase structure. For the one-dimensional Ising model the
scalar curvature, R, of this metric can be calculated explicitly in
the thermodynamic limit and is found to be R=1+cosh(h)/sinh2(h)+exp(−4β). This is positive definite and, for
physical fields and temperatures, diverges only at the zero-temperature,
zero-field ``critical point'' of the model.
In this note we calculate R for the one-dimensional q-state Potts
model, finding an expression of the form R=A(q,β,h)+B(q,β,h)/η(q,β,h), where η(q,β,h) is the Potts
analogue of sinh2(h)+exp(−4β). This is no longer positive
definite, but once again it diverges only at the critical point in the space of
real parameters. We remark, however, that a naive analytic continuation to
complex field reveals a further divergence in the Ising and Potts curvatures at
the Lee-Yang edge.Comment: 9 pages + 4 eps figure