
Concepts on statistical physics - fluctuations in equilibrium
Author(s) -
Laurence Brenig
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
e-boletim da física
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2318-8901
DOI - 10.26512/e-bfis.v4i1.9812
Subject(s) - ising model , renormalization group , statistical mechanics , physics , statistical physics , critical phenomena , critical exponent , van der waals force , ferromagnetism , phase transition , theoretical physics , condensed matter physics , quantum mechanics , molecule
This essay corresponds to the content of three lectures about statistical physics delivered to the audience of the 2014 section of the R. A. Salmeron School of Physics, at the UnB. Our starting point was very simple statistical models (lattice gas, spin-1/2 ferromagnet), used as illustrations of the competencies and methods in statistical physics. Thus we introduce the Gibbs ensembles, defining a connection with thermodynamics and discussing the role played by fluctuations and large numbers. We present phenomenological aspects of phase transitions and critical phenomena in simple fluids and in uniaxial ferromagnets, emphasizing the universal character of the critical exponents. We describe the phenomenological van der Waals and Curie-Weiss theories and the Landau expansion, which are present-day relevant methods, despite the fact that such theories give rise to critical exponents in disagreement with experiments. We present then the paradigmatic Ising model, which points us to a way to overcome the phenomenological results. A brief presentation of the scale phenomenological methods and the contemporaneous renormalization group are considered at the end of these lectures.