THE ISOSPIN DEPENDENCE OF THE NUCLEAR PHASE TRANSITION NEAR THE CRITICAL POINT

2010 ◽  
Vol 19 (08n09) ◽  
pp. 1570-1576
Author(s):  
Z. CHEN ◽  
R. WADA ◽  
A. BONASERA ◽  
T. KEUTGEN ◽  
K. HAGEL ◽  
...  

The experimental results reveal the isospin dependence of the nuclear phase transition in terms of the Landau Free Energy description of critical phenomena. Near the critical point, different ratios of the neutron to proton concentrations lead to different critical points for the phase transition which is analogous to the phase transitions in He 4- He 3 liquid mixtures. The antisymmetrized molecular dynamics (AMD) and GEMINI models calculations were also performed and the results will be discussed as well.

1996 ◽  
Vol 10 (12) ◽  
pp. 531-536 ◽  
Author(s):  
X.F. OU ◽  
J.T. OU ◽  
D.L. LIN

To the lowest order approximation, the method of variational cumulant expansion has been successful in the determination of the critical point of a spin system on the Ising model. In the second order calculation, unphysical phase transition arises. In this letter, we first analyze the origin of unphysical phase transitions in high-order variational cumulant expansion calculations. We then explain the basis on which a conjecture is proposed that to any order m of the variational cumulant expansion, the critical point is given by the bifurcation point of the free energy. The theory is finally verified numerically for the two-dimensional case.


Author(s):  
Robert H. Swendsen

Phase transitions are introduced using the van der Waals gas as an example. The equations of state are derived from the Helmholtz free energy of the ideal gas. The behavior of this model is analyzed, and an instability leads to a liquid-gas phase transition. The Maxwell construction for the pressure at which a phase transition occurs is derived. The effect of phase transition on the Gibbs free energy and Helmholtz free energy is shown. Latent heat is defined, and the Clausius–Clapeyron equation is derived. Gibbs' phase rule is derived and illustrated.


1984 ◽  
Vol 24 (02) ◽  
pp. 197-202 ◽  
Author(s):  
John S. Huang ◽  
Mahn Won Kim

Abstract We used dynamic light scattering to study the characteristic droplet size, in dilute single-phase microemulsions near the critical phase transition point. We found that there existed a general power-law dependence of f on point. We found that there existed a general power-law dependence of f on the reduced variable = . Here stands for any thermodynamic and system variables whose critical value is denoted by . The variables of interest in the present work are temperature and alkane carbon number (ACN). It is found that where = . This is observed both in water- and oil-internal microemulsions, independent of the surfactant properties. This behavior, known as the scaling behavior, was analyzed in terms of generalized homogeneous functions with as the degree of homogeneity. It turns out that only one of the reduced variables is an independent variable in these functions, greatly simplifying the description of the properties of microemulsions in the neighborhood of a critical phase boundary. Introduction Critical phenomena have been under intensive investigation for the past 20 years by physicists and physical chemists. There are several reasons for this subject to attract so much attention. SINGULARITIES. A large number of thermodynamic properties, especially ones related to the second-order derivative of the free energy, become singular (in a mathematical sense) at the critical point. UNIVERSALITY. There exists a universal description (scaling laws) of the singular behavior of all the corresponding thermodynamic parameters in a large number of vastly different systems. These range from simple liquid/gas mixtures, liquid crystals, and magnetic alloys to the quantum mechanical superfluids. NONCLASSICAL BEHAVIOR. Though critical properties are macroscopic properties pertaining to the bulk phases, classical thermodynamics is properties pertaining to the bulk phases, classical thermodynamics is inadequate to explain quantitatively what happens in the neighborhood of the critical points. NEW PARAMETERS. Geometric properties (such as the symmetry group of the so-called "order parameter") and spatial dimensionality of the system are more important than the nature of basic interactions that produce the phase transition. phase transition. Great progress has been achieved, both experimentally (such as dynamic light scattering) and theoretically (such as the powerful scaling laws and renormalization group theories), in the study of critical phenomena. As a result, a vast amount of knowledge has been accumulated on the subject in recent years. Critical phenomena may also play an important role in the understanding of the fundamental mechanism in EOR by microemulsions and micellar solutions. Microemulsions do exhibit unmistakable critical behavior in certain composition and temperature ranges near the cloud point of a homogeneous system. There are many ways to cause a homogeneous microemulsion to split into a multiphase system. When any of the system variables, such as the temperature, salinity, composition of the oil, and concentration of the dispersed phase, are changed in such a manner that the resultant phase transition occurs in the neighborhood of a plait point, which corresponds to a vanishing tie line, then the system will exhibit critical phenomena. All critical transitions are characterized by pronounced thermodynamic fluctuations. These fluctuations are described by a con-elation length that diverges at the critical point, causing a strong scattering of light known as the critical opalescence, a feature that is also observed in microemulsions. By definition, the correlation length diverges at the critical value, Zc, of the corresponding system variable, . Therefore, the reduced variable delta Z = Zc -Z expresses a measure of a "thermodynamic distance" to the critical point. We use the lower-case letter z = delta Z/Zc to denote the dimensionless scaled variables that are important for the description of the universal behavior of a microemulsion near a critical phase boundary. In the neighborhood of the critical point, the physical phase boundary. In the neighborhood of the critical point, the physical properties of the microemulsion systems depend on some universal function properties of the microemulsion systems depend on some universal function of scaled variables only, independent of the chemical makeup of the system. We call this the critical scaling behavior. Experimental Procedure MICROEMULSION SYSTEM. We have chosen two model microemulsions for our study. One is a simple pure three-component oil-continuous system containing pure normal alkanes, distilled water, and a surfactant commonly known as AOT. This surfactant, sodium di-2-ethyl hexylsulfosuccinate, was twice recrystallized from hexane over activated charcoal. The other is a water-continuous system composed of 8% NaCl brine solution, normal alkanes and a combined surfactant (hepta-ethoxylated octadecyl methyl ammonium-i-dodecyl-o-xylene sulfonates). SPEJ p. 197


2019 ◽  
pp. 111-176
Author(s):  
Hans-Peter Eckle

Interacting many-particle systems may undergo phase transitions and exhibit critical phenomena in the limit of infinite system size, while the precursors of these phenomena are studied in the theory of finite-size scaling. After surveying the basic notions of phases, phase diagrams, and phase transitions, this chapter focuses on critical behaviour at a second-order phase transition. The Landau-Ginzburg theory and the concept of scaling prepare readers for an elementary introduction to the concepts of the renormalization group, followed by an introduction into the field of quantum phase transitions where quantum fluctuations take over the role of thermal fluctuations.


1992 ◽  
Vol 06 (29) ◽  
pp. 1887-1891
Author(s):  
D. CASSI ◽  
S. REGINA

We study by analytical techniques the dynamical phase transition between recursive and transient regime induced on comb lattices by a topological bias. The critical exponents are expressed as functions of the intrinsic dimensions of these structures. In particular we show that, unlike what happens on Bethe lattices, it takes in general two different exponents to characterize the approach to the critical point from the recursive phase and from the transient one. These exponents depend respectively on the connectivity and on the spectral dimension.


2017 ◽  
Vol 2017 ◽  
pp. 1-5 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jakub Mielczarek

This article addresses the issue of possible gravitational phase transitions in the early universe. We suggest that a second-order phase transition observed in the Causal Dynamical Triangulations approach to quantum gravity may have a cosmological relevance. The phase transition interpolates between a nongeometric crumpled phase of gravity and an extended phase with classical properties. Transition of this kind has been postulated earlier in the context of geometrogenesis in the Quantum Graphity approach to quantum gravity. We show that critical behavior may also be associated with a signature change in Loop Quantum Cosmology, which occurs as a result of quantum deformation of the hypersurface deformation algebra. In the considered cases, classical space-time originates at the critical point associated with a second-order phase transition. Relation between the gravitational phase transitions and the corresponding change of symmetry is underlined.


2016 ◽  
Vol 30 (14) ◽  
pp. 1650082 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ahmad Musleh Alrub ◽  
Lye-Hock Ong ◽  
K.-H. Chew ◽  
J. M. Khoshman ◽  
Ghadeer N. Al Shabaan ◽  
...  

Magnetoelectric (ME) multiferroic bismuth manganite (BiMnO[Formula: see text] has ferroelectric (FE) and ferromagnetic order parameters that coupled biquadratically. Landau free energy expression in these order parameters is proposed to investigate the phase transition and thermodynamic properties of a BiMnO3 film. The surface energy term is included in the free energy. We find that the ME coupling enhances the magnetic transition temperature. The magnetization and polarization order parameters are both increased strongly below the new magnetic transition temperature. The curves for magnetization and polarization versus temperature show that the phase transition is second-order. The entropy, free energy, and specific heat of the BiMnO3 multiferroic are calculated. Thickness-driven phase transitions for magnetization and polarization of BiMnO3 thin film are clearly indicated.


Author(s):  
N.K. Balabaev ◽  
V.D. Lakhno

The applicability of molecular dynamics and Monte-Carlo methods near the phase transition is discussed on the example of DNA melting.


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