Rudolf Peierls: Difference between revisions
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==Peierls' argument== | ==Peierls' argument== | ||
Before the explicit solution by [[Lars Onsager]], Peierls put forward an ingenuous argument showing that | Before the explicit solution by [[Lars Onsager]], Peierls put forward an ingenuous argument showing that | ||
the [[ Ising_Models#2-dimensional_Ising_model | two-dimensional Ising model]] must have a phase transition (at a finite temperature). The argument considers the entropy associated with the interface between domains with different orientations (Ref. 1). | the [[ Ising_Models#2-dimensional_Ising_model | two-dimensional Ising model]] must have a phase transition (at a finite temperature). The argument considers the [[entropy]] associated with the interface between domains with different orientations (Ref. 1). | ||
==References== | ==References== | ||
*Rudolf Peierls "More surprises in Theoretical Physics". Princeton University Press (1991) ISBN 0-691-02522-3 | *Rudolf Peierls "More surprises in Theoretical Physics". Princeton University Press (1991) ISBN 0-691-02522-3 |
Latest revision as of 10:21, 21 April 2008
Sir Rudolf Ernst Peierls, (5 June 1907, Berlin – 19 September 1995, Oxford), was a German-born British physicist. Rudolph Peierls had a major role in Britain's nuclear program, but he also had a role in many modem sciences.
Peierls' argument[edit]
Before the explicit solution by Lars Onsager, Peierls put forward an ingenuous argument showing that the two-dimensional Ising model must have a phase transition (at a finite temperature). The argument considers the entropy associated with the interface between domains with different orientations (Ref. 1).
References[edit]
- Rudolf Peierls "More surprises in Theoretical Physics". Princeton University Press (1991) ISBN 0-691-02522-3