PORTALE DELLA DIDATTICA

PORTALE DELLA DIDATTICA

PORTALE DELLA DIDATTICA

Elenco notifiche



Field theory and critical phenomena

01SPPPF

A.A. 2021/22

Course Language

Inglese

Degree programme(s)

Master of science-level of the Bologna process in Physics Of Complex Systems (Fisica Dei Sistemi Complessi) - Torino/Trieste/Parigi

Course structure
Teaching Hours
Lezioni 60
Lecturers
Teacher Status SSD h.Les h.Ex h.Lab h.Tut Years teaching
Dall'Asta Luca   Professore Associato PHYS-02/A 60 0 0 0 7
Co-lectures
Espandi

Context
SSD CFU Activities Area context
FIS/02 6 C - Affini o integrative Attività formative affini o integrative
2021/22
Mandatory course for the Master in Physics of Complex Systems (national track), 2nd year, 1st term. The course aims to provide an introduction to statistical field theory and its application to the study of phase transitions and critical phenomena in complex systems. The formulation of interacting many-body systems in terms of continuous fields makes possible to go beyond mean-field approximations (Landau theory) to evaluate the effects of spatial fluctuations and correlations and their influence on the collective behaviour of systems near a phase transition. To this purpose, the course will provide an introduction to the mathematical tools (functional integrals, perturbative expansions, Feynman diagrams) and physical concepts (scale invariance, renormalization) that are at the basis of modern statistical physics. The revolutionary idea of ​Wilson’s renormalization group will be introduced and discussed by means of examples. The same methods will be also applied to the study of selected topics such as collective non-equilibrium phenomena and disordered systems.
With this course, students will learn some fundamental notions of the physics of critical phenomena in many-body systems, such as scale invariance, the renormalization group and the universality of a physical theory. By means of the exercises proposed and solved in the class, they will become familiar with mathematical tools of daily use in the most advanced areas of research in theoretical and statistical physics.
Elements of probability theory and complex analysis, Fourier analysis, basic knowledge of statistical mechanics and phase transitions.
0. Introductory material (~3h): - self-similarity, scale invariance, fractal geometry, dimensional analysis and scaling. 1. Percolation theory (~5h): - phenomenology and mathematical representation of the percolation transition, exact and approximate results on low-dimensional regular lattices, recursive solution on Bethe lattices, calculation of mean-field critical exponents. 2. Landau theory (~6 h): - review of mean-field theories, phenomenological description of phase transitions, functional integrals, mean-field theory as a saddle-point approximation, mean-field critical exponents. 3. Breakdown of mean-field theory (~8 h): - validity of the Landau approximation, fluctuations, and Ginzburg criterion, upper critical dimension; - Gaussian model, exact calculations of critical exponents; - lower-critical dimension and topological excitations, discrete and continuous symmetry breaking (Goldstone modes and domain walls). 4. Scaling hypothesis and the renormalization group (~8 h): - scaling form of the mean-field equations, scaling beyond mean-field - the Renormalization Group transformation - Wilson’s momentum-shell renormalization procedure, fixed-points, and critical exponents for the Gaussian model. 5. Perturbative Momentum-shell Renormalization Group (~15h): - coarse-graining and integration over fast modes, perturbative expansion of the action, Feynman diagrams, - renormalization of the action and evaluation of momentum-shell integrals, derivation of RG flow equations, epsilon-expansion - Gaussian and Wilson-Fisher fixed points in the phi^4 scalar theory, computation of non-mean-field values of critical exponents - renormalization of the O(n) model, other examples. 6. Field Theory and Non-equilibrium Statistical Physics (~15h). Selected topics among: - equilibrium dynamics of a field, linear response and fluctuation-dissipation theorem; - response functional formalism, non-equilibrium critical dynamics, interface growth, Edwards-Wilkinson, and Kardar-Parisi-Zhang universality classes; - Peliti-Doi formalism, reaction-diffusion systems, and absorbing phase transitions; - slow relaxation in the dynamics of the p-spin spherical model, mode-coupling equations, ergodicity breaking.
The course is characterized by classroom-taught lectures mostly delivered using the blackboard (by means of a graphic tablet and slides in case of lectures delivered online). Exercises will be tackled and solved during the classes or proposed as homework, then solved in the class few lectures later.
- Mehran Kardar, Statistical Physics of Fields, Cambridge University Press, 2007 - John Cardy, Scaling and Renormalisation in Statistical Physics, Cambridge University Press, 1996 - Nigel Goldenfeld, Lectures on Phase Transitions and the Renormalization Group, CRC Press, 2018 - Giorgio Parisi, Statistical Field Theory, Addison-Wesley, 1988. - complete lecture notes will be provided by the teacher
Exam: Written test; Compulsory oral exam;
The understanding of the subjects covered in the course and the ability of the student to apply the learned concepts to the resolution of exercises and problems in the physics of complex systems will be evaluated through a written exam. The written onsite exam will focus on the entire program of the course and it will consist of the resolution of a multistep guided problem requiring the application of ideas and computational techniques learned during the classes (statistical mechanics and field-theoretic formulation, scaling relations, perturbative expansion, diagrammatics, and renormalization group transformations). Examples of exercises proposed in the past exams will be provided during the course. Duration of the exam: 2h-2.5h. Students can consult lecture notes/personal notes during the exam. All students obtaining a grade of 18/30 or higher have to pass an extensive oral exam (duration about 1h). The oral exam will focus on the entire program of the course and it will consist of an initial question on a topic selected by the student plus two, three other theoretical questions.
In addition to the message sent by the online system, students with disabilities or Specific Learning Disorders (SLD) are invited to directly inform the professor in charge of the course about the special arrangements for the exam that have been agreed with the Special Needs Unit. The professor has to be informed at least one week before the beginning of the examination session in order to provide students with the most suitable arrangements for each specific type of exam.
Exam: Compulsory oral exam; Paper-based written test with video surveillance of the teaching staff;
The understanding of the subjects covered in the course and the ability of the student to apply the learned concepts to the resolution of exercises and problems in the physics of complex systems will be evaluated through a written exam. The written (online) exam will focus on the entire program of the course and it will consist of the resolution of a multistep guided problem requiring the application of ideas and computational techniques learned during the classes (statistical mechanics and field-theoretic formulation, scaling relations, perturbative expansion, diagrammatics, and renormalization group transformations). Examples of exercises proposed in the past exams will be provided during the course. Duration of the exam: 2h-2.5h. Students can consult lecture notes/personal notes during the exam. All students obtaining a grade of 18/30 or higher have to pass an extensive oral exam (duration about 1h). The oral exam (carried out by means of videoconference platforms, and use of tablets or whiteboards) will focus on the entire program of the course and it will consist of an initial question on a topic selected by the student plus two, three other theoretical questions.
Exam: Written test; Compulsory oral exam; Paper-based written test with video surveillance of the teaching staff;
The understanding of the subjects covered in the course and the ability of the student to apply the learned concepts to the resolution of exercises and problems in the physics of complex systems will be evaluated through a written exam. The written (onsite and online) exam will focus on the entire program of the course and it will consist of the resolution of a multistep guided problem requiring the application of ideas and computational techniques learned during the classes (statistical mechanics and field-theoretic formulation, scaling relations, perturbative expansion, diagrammatics, and renormalization group transformations). Examples of exercises proposed in the past exams will be provided during the course. Duration of the exam: 2h-2.5h. Students can consult lecture notes/personal notes during the exam. All students obtaining a grade of 18/30 or higher have to pass an extensive oral exam (duration about 1h). The oral exam (onsite or carried out by means of videoconference platforms, and use of tablets or whiteboards) will focus on the entire program of the course and it will consist of an initial question on a topic selected by the student plus two, three other theoretical questions.
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