Static Phenomena Near Critical Points: Theory and Experiment

LEO P. KADANOFF, WOLFGANG GÖTZE, DAVID HAMBLEN, ROBERT HECHT, E. A. S. LEWIS, V. V. PALCIAUSKAS, MARTIN RAYL, J. SWIFT, DAVID ASPNES, and JOSEPH KANE
Rev. Mod. Phys. 39, 395 – Published 1 April 1967
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Abstract

This paper compares theory and experiment for behavior very near critical points. The primary experimental results are the "critical indices" which describe singularities in various thermodynamic derivatives and correlation functions. These indices are tabulated and compared with theory. The basic theoretical ideas are introduced via the molecular field approach, which brings in the concept of an order parameter and suggests that there are close relations among different phase transition problems. Although this theory is qualitatively correct it is quantitatively wrong, it predicts the wrong values of the critical indices. Another theoretical approach, the "scaling law" concept, which predicts relations among these indices, is described. The experimental evidence for and against the scaling laws is assessed. It is suggested that the scaling laws provide a promising approach to understanding phenomena near the critical point, but that they are by no means proved or disproved by the existing experimental data.

    DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/RevModPhys.39.395

    ©1967 American Physical Society

    Authors & Affiliations

    LEO P. KADANOFF*, WOLFGANG GÖTZE, DAVID HAMBLEN, ROBERT HECHT, E. A. S. LEWIS, V. V. PALCIAUSKAS, MARTIN RAYL, and J. SWIFT

    • Department of Physics and Materials Research Laboratory, University of Illinois, Urbana, Illinois

    DAVID ASPNES

    • Department of Physics, Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island

    JOSEPH KANE

    • The Laboratory of Atomic and Solid-State Physics, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York

    • *A. P. Sloan Foundation Fellow.
    • Stipendiat der Clemens Plassman-Stiftung. On leave from the Max Planck-Institut fur Physik und Astrophysik, Munich, Germany.
    • Work supported in part by the Advanced Research Projects Agency under Contract ARPA SD-131 and the National Science Foundation Grant NSF GP-4937.

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    Issue

    Vol. 39, Iss. 2 — April - June 1967

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