- Kosterlitz–Thouless transition
The Kosterlitz–Thouless transition, or Berezinsky–Kosterlitz–Thouless transition, is a special transition seen in the
XY model for interacting spin systems in 2 spatial dimensions.TheXY model is a 2-Dimensional vector spin model that possessesU(1) or circular symmetry. This system is not expected to possess a normalsecond order phase transition .This is because the expected ordered phase of the system is destroyed by transverse fluctuations, i.ethe Goldstone modes (seeGoldstone boson ) associated with this brokencontinuous symmetry , which logarithmically diverge with system size.This is a specific case of what is called theMermin–Wagner theorem in spin systems.The transition is named for
John M. Kosterlitz andDavid J. Thouless KT Transition : Disordered Phases with different correlations
In the XY model in two dimensions,a second order phase transition is not seen. However, one finds a low-temperature quasi-ordered phase with a
correlation function (seestatistical mechanics ) that decreases with the distance like a power, depending on the temperature. The transition from the high temperature disordered phase with the exponential correlation to this low temperature quasi-ordered phase is a Kosterlitz–Thouless transition.It is aphase transition of infinite order.Role of Vortices
In the XY model in 2 dimensions,
vortices are topologically stable configurations.It is found that the high temperature disordered phase with exponential correlation is aresult of the formation of vortices.The temperature at which the KT transition occurs is in fact that at which vortex generation becomes thermodynamically favourable.At temperatures below this, the system has a power law correlation.Informal Description
There is a very elegant thermodynamic argument for the KT transition. The energy of a single vortex is of the form , where is a parameter depending upon the system the vortex is in, is the system size, and is the radius of the vortex core. We assume . The number of possible positions of any vortex in the system is approximately . From
Boltzmann 's law, theentropy is , where isBoltzmann's constant . Thus, theHelmholtz free energy is:.
When , the system is unstable to having a vortex. However when , the conditions are sufficient for a vortex to be in the system. We define the transition temperature for . Thus,
:.
Rigorous Analysis
We have a field φ over the plane which takes on values in S1. For convenience, we work with its universal cover R instead but identify any two values of φ(x) which differs by an integer multiple of 2π.
The energy is given by
:
and the
Boltzmann factor is exp(-βE).If we take the contour integral over any closed path γ, we would expect it to be zero if γ is contractible, which is what we would expect for a planar curve. But here is the catch. Assume the XY theory has a UV cutoff which requires some UV completion. Then, we can have punctures in the plane, holes so to speak so that if γ is a closed path which winds once around the puncture, is only an integer multiple of 2π. These punctures are called vortices and if γ is a closed path which only winds once counterclockwise around the puncture and its winding number about any other puncture is zero, then the integer multiplicity can be attached to the vortex itself. Let's say a field configuration has n punctures at xi, i=1,...,n with multiplicities ni. Then, φ decomposes into the sum of a field configuration with no punctures, φ0 and where we have switched to the complex plane coordinates for convenience. The latter term has branch cuts, of course, but since φ is only defined modulo 2π they are unphysical.
Now,
:
It's easy to see that unless , the second term is positive infinite, making the Boltzmann factor zero which means that we can forget all about it.
When , the second term is equal to .
This is nothing other than a
Coulomb gas , of course. The scale L contributes nothing but a constant.Let's look at the case with only one vortex of multiplicity one and one vortex of multiplicity -1. At low temperatures, i.e. large β, because of the Boltzmann factor, the vortex-antivortex pair tends to be extremely close to one another. In fact, their separation would be around the cutoff scale. With more vortex-antivortex pairs, we have a collection of vortex-antivortex dipoles. At large temperatures, i.e. small β, the probability distribution swings the other way around and we have a plasma of vortices and antivortices. The phase transition between the two is the Kosterlitz–Thouless phase transition.
ee also
*
Goldstone boson
*Ising model
*Potts model
*quantum vortex
*superfluid film
*Topological defect References
*J. M. Kosterlitz & D. J. Thouless, " [http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/0022-3719/6/7/010 Ordering, metastability and phase transitions in two-dimensional systems] ", Journal of Physics C: Solid State Physics, Vol. 6 pages 1181-1203 (1973)
* Z. Hadzibabic et. al.: "Berezinskii–Kosterlitz–Thouless crossover in a trapped atomic gas", [http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nature04851 Nature 441, 1118 (2006)]Books
* H. Kleinert, "Gauge Fields in Condensed Matter", Vol. I, " SUPERFLOW AND VORTEX LINES", pp. 1--742, [http://www.worldscibooks.com/physics/0356.htm World Scientific (Singapore, 1989)] ; Paperback ISBN 9971-5-0210-0 " (also available online: [http://www.physik.fu-berlin.de/~kleinert/kleiner_reb1/contents1.html Vol. I] . Read pp. 618--688);
* H. Kleinert, "Multivalued Fields in in Condensed Matter, Electrodynamics, and Gravitation", [http://www.worldscibooks.com/physics/6742.html World Scientific (Singapore, 2008)] (also available online: [http://www.physik.fu-berlin.de/~kleinert/re.html#B9 here] )
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