Critical dimensionalities of phase transitions on fractals
- 1 January 1994
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physical Society (APS) in Physical Review E
- Vol. 49 (1) , 99-103
- https://doi.org/10.1103/physreve.49.99
Abstract
Several arguments are given leading to the sufficient and necessary condition for spontaneous symmetry breaking at a finite temperature on fractals, which is d̃≥2 for discrete symmetry and d≥+1 for continuous symmetry, where d̃, d, and are, respectively, the spectral dimensionality, fractal dimensionality, and dimensionality of the random walk of this structure. In addition, phase transitions can always occur at >0 on infinitely ramified lattices. Since d̃0 is expected. A Peierls-Griffiths proof is given for an Ising model on an example of bifractals, the periodic Koch lattice with d̃=2, showing that is indeed finite. A unified picture concerning both fractal and Euclidean lattices is thus obtained.
Keywords
This publication has 13 references indexed in Scilit:
- Phase transitions and random walks on graphs: A generalization of the Mermin-Wagner theorem to disordered lattices, fractals, and other discrete structuresPhysical Review Letters, 1992
- Phase transitions on fractals. III. Infinitely ramified latticesJournal of Physics A: General Physics, 1984
- Phase transitions on fractals. II. Sierpinski gasketsJournal of Physics A: General Physics, 1984
- Phase transitions on fractals. I. Quasi-linear latticesJournal of Physics A: General Physics, 1983
- Density of states on fractals : « fractons »Journal de Physique Lettres, 1982
- Critical Phenomena on Fractal LatticesPhysical Review Letters, 1980
- Existence of Long-Range Order in One and Two DimensionsPhysical Review B, 1967
- Absence of Ferromagnetism or Antiferromagnetism in One- or Two-Dimensional Isotropic Heisenberg ModelsPhysical Review Letters, 1966
- Peierls Proof of Spontaneous Magnetization in a Two-Dimensional Ising FerromagnetPhysical Review B, 1964
- On Ising's model of ferromagnetismMathematical Proceedings of the Cambridge Philosophical Society, 1936