- Transfer-matrix method
In
physics andmathematics , the transfer-matrix method is a general technique for solving problems in statistical mechanics.The basic idea is to write the partition function in the form
:
where v"0" and v"N" are vectors of dimension "p" and the "pxp" matrices Wk are the so-called transfer matrices. In some cases, particularly for cyclic systems, the partition function may be written more simply as
:
where "tr" denotes the matrix trace. In either case, the partition function may be solved exactly using
eigenanalysis . If the matrices are all the same matrix W, the partition function may be approximated as the "N" power of the largest eigenvalue of W, since the trace is the sum of the eigenvalues and the eigenvalues of the product of two diagonal matrices equals the product of their individual eigenvalues.The transfer-matrix method is used when the total system can be broken into a "sequence" of subsystems that interact only with adjacent subsystems. For example, a three-dimensional cubical lattice of spins in an
Ising model can be decomposed into a sequence of two-dimensional planar lattices of spins that interact only adjacently. The dimension "p" of the "pxp" transfer matrix equals the number of states the subsystem may have; the transfer matrix itself W"k" encodes thestatistical weight associated with a particular state of subsystem "k-1" being next to another state of subsystem "k".Transfer-matrix methods have been critical for many exact solutions of problems in
statistical mechanics , including the Zimm-Bragg andLifson-Roig model s of the helix-coil transition, as well as the two-dimensionalIsing model solution that won immortality forLars Onsager .See also
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Transfer operator References
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