Physics:N-vector model

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In statistical mechanics, the n-vector model or O(n) model is a simple system of interacting spins on a crystalline lattice. It was developed by H. Eugene Stanley as a generalization of the Ising model, XY model and Heisenberg model.[1] In the n-vector model, n-component unit-length classical spins 𝐬i are placed on the vertices of a d-dimensional lattice. The Hamiltonian of the n-vector model is given by:

H=Ji,j𝐬i𝐬j

where the sum runs over all pairs of neighboring spins i,j and denotes the standard Euclidean inner product. Special cases of the n-vector model are:

n=0: The self-avoiding walk[2][3]
n=1: The Ising model
n=2: The XY model
n=3: The Heisenberg model
n=4: Toy model for the Higgs sector of the Standard Model

The general mathematical formalism used to describe and solve the n-vector model and certain generalizations are developed in the article on the Potts model.

Continuum limit

The continuum limit can be understood to be the sigma model. This can be easily obtained by writing the Hamiltonian in terms of the product

12(𝐬i𝐬j)(𝐬i𝐬j)=𝐬i𝐬j1

where 𝐬i𝐬i=1 is the "bulk magnetization" term. Dropping this term as an overall constant factor added to the energy, the limit is obtained by defining the Newton finite difference as

δh[𝐬](i,j)=𝐬i𝐬jh

on neighboring lattice locations i,j. Then δh[𝐬]μ𝐬 in the limit h0, where μ is the gradient in the (i,j)μ direction. Thus, in the limit,

𝐬i𝐬j12μ𝐬μ𝐬

which can be recognized as the kinetic energy of the field 𝐬 in the sigma model. One still has two possibilities for the spin 𝐬: it is either taken from a discrete set of spins (the Potts model) or it is taken as a point on the sphere Sn1; that is, 𝐬 is a continuously-valued vector of unit length. In the later case, this is referred to as the O(n) non-linear sigma model, as the rotation group O(n) is group of isometries of Sn1, and obviously, Sn1 isn't "flat", i.e. isn't a linear field.

References

  1. Stanley, H. E. (1968). "Dependence of Critical Properties upon Dimensionality of Spins". Phys. Rev. Lett. 20 (12): 589–592. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.20.589. Bibcode1968PhRvL..20..589S. 
  2. de Gennes, P. G. (1972). "Exponents for the excluded volume problem as derived by the Wilson method". Phys. Lett. A 38 (5): 339–340. doi:10.1016/0375-9601(72)90149-1. Bibcode1972PhLA...38..339D. 
  3. Gaspari, George; Rudnick, Joseph (1986). "n-vector model in the limit n→0 and the statistics of linear polymer systems: A Ginzburg–Landau theory". Phys. Rev. B 33 (5): 3295–3305. doi:10.1103/PhysRevB.33.3295. PMID 9938709. Bibcode1986PhRvB..33.3295G.