Problem 1: Predictions of the Landau theory for the critical exponents
and 
(a) Starting from the Gibbs free energy density in Landau theory:
show that isothermal susceptibility
is given by
for
and
for
, so that critical exponent
according to Landau mean-field theory. HINT: Find the value of the order parameter
which minimizes
and use
.
(b) Show that
at the critical point, and hence critical exponent
, where
is defined by
.
Problem 2: Ginzburg criterion for the range of validity of mean-field theory
This problem explores Ginzburg criterion for the validity of mean-field theory in arbitrary spatial dimension and its expression in terms of experimentally measurable quantities.
(a) The general solution for the correlation function in arbitrary spatial dimension
within the mean-field theory can be written as:
assuming that distance
is much larger than the lattice spacing
. Generalize the Ginzburg criterion
for the validity of the mean-field theory to arbitrary spatial dimension
to show that it is satisfied if
.
where
and
are critical exponents for describing vanishing of the order parameter
and divergence of the correlation length
, respectively.
(b) Using your result in (a), find the upper critical dimension for the Ising model above which its critical behavior near temperature
is well-described by the mean-field theory.
(c) The Ginzburg criterion can be expressed in terms of the measurable quantities, such as critical temperature
, the correlation length
at
, and
the jump (predicted by the mean-field theory) in the specific heat
at
. Use Landau-Ginzburg solution for the correlation length
at
to express it as
and show that the correlation length extrapolated to
is given by:
.
Thus, the parameter
, which measures the strength of fluctuations in the Landau-Ginzburg form of the free energy, can be eliminated in favor of measurable quantity
and the parameter
.
(d) Use Landau mean-field theory to show that
can be expressed in terms of the jump
in the specific heat (see page 84 in Plischke and Bergersen textbook)
at
:
.
(e) Using
from the Landau theory and your results in (c) and (d), show that the Ginzburg criterion derived in the class
can be expressed as
.
For example, in conventional superconductors
(radius of the Cooper pair formed by two electrons), so that the Ginzburg criterion tells us that mean-field theory description is valid even for temperatures as close to
as
.
Problem 3: Renormalization group for 1D Ising model using transfer matrix method
In this problem you will apply renormalization group (for which the Nobel Prize in Physics 1982 was awarded to Kenneth G. Wilson) to 1D Ising model in the external magnetic field
. The partition function for the N-spin Ising chain can be written as the trace of the N-th power of the transfer matrix T (page 78-79 in the Plischke & Bergersen textbook). Another way to reduce the number of degrees of freedom is the describe the system in terms of two-spin cells, where the partition function is written as:
The transfer matrix for two-spin cells,
, can be written as:
.
where
and
.
We require that
has the same form as
:
where a parameter
must be introduced because matching of
and
requires to match three matrix elements of such symmetric
matrices, which is impossible with only two variables
and
.
(a) Show that the three unknowns satisfy the three conditions:
(b) Show that the solution of equations in (a) can be written as:
(c) Show that the recursion relations in (b) reduce to:
for
. For