A Primer to the Theory of Critical Phenomena provides scientists in academia and industry, as well as graduate students in physics, chemistry, and geochemistry with the scientific fundamentals of critical phenomena and phase transitions. The book helps readers broaden their understanding of a field that has developed tremendously over the last forty years. The book also makes a great resource for graduate level instructors at universities.
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Table of Contents
1. Introduction: Classical Phases and Critical Points 2. The Ising Model and Its Basic Characteristics in the Mean Field Approximation 3. General Mean Field Approach 4. The Landau Theory of Phase Transitions: General concept and its microscopic relation to mean eld theory 5. More General Considerations Concerning Mean Field Theory: Stratonovich-Hubbard transformation? 6. Generalities Relating to the Study of Critical Phenomena 7. Failure of Mean Field Theory and Scaling Methods 8. Kadanoff Scaling 9. The Renormalization Group Operations 10. Additional Interrelations Between Critical Exponents 11. Renormalization Group Operations 12. Detection of Fixed Points 13. The Standard Gaussian Model 14. Higher Order Expansion 15. The Ginzburg-Landau Model
Authors
Jurgen M. Honig Department of Chemistry, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN, USA.
Prof. Honig received a BS degree from Amherst College in 1945 and a PhD degree from the University of Minnesota in 1952. After a postdoctoral appointment year at the James Forrestal Center of Princeton University in 1953, he joined the Department of Chemistry at Purdue University in 1953, and was promoted to Associate Professor in 1958. From 1959-1967, Prof. Honig was Associate Group leader and Group leader at the MIT Lincoln Laboratory in Lexington, MA. He returned as Professor of Chemistry to Purdue University in 1967 and retired from that position in 2000. During the latter years, he was Editor of the Journal of Solid State Chemistry (1982-2000), the Chairman of the Materials Sciences Council (1968-1982), and published over 420 refereed publications and five books.
Prof. Honig has earned an honorary degree from the University of Science and Technology (2009, Krakow, Poland; fellow of the New York Academy of Sciences; Wetherill medal (1995); Editor, Journal of Solid State Chemistry (1982- 2000); Honorary Member, Materials Research Society of India; two issues of the Journal of Solid State Chemistry (1990 and 2000) and an issue of Solid State Sciences (2000) dedicated to him; and a session at a Materials Research Society meeting (2000) held in honor of his retirement.
Jozef Spalek Professor of Theoretical Physics, Marian Smoluchowski Institute of Physics, Jagiellonian University, Kraków, Poland.
Józef Spalek is currently professor of theoretical physics in the Marian Smoluchowski Institute of Physics, Jagiellonian University in Kraków (Poland). He is interested in theory of strongly correlated systems and, in particular, in high-temperature superconductivity and phase transitions in fermionic systems. In 2016 he received the two highest scientific prizes in Poland: The Foundation for Polish Science Award and The Prime Minister Prize, for his work on strongly correlated systems, and in particular, for the original derivation of the t-J model. At present, he is working on another book, Introduction to Condensed Matter Physics, with selected topics in strongly correlated systems, to be published by Springer-Verlag (2018).