Jump to content

Coulomb gas

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

In statistical physics, a Coulomb gas is a many-body system of charged particles interacting under the electrostatic force. It is named after Charles-Augustin de Coulomb, as the force by which the particles interact is also known as the Coulomb force.

The system can be defined in any number of dimensions. While the three-dimensional Coulomb gas is the most experimentally realistic, the best understood is the two-dimensional Coulomb gas. The two-dimensional Coulomb gas is known to be equivalent to the continuum XY model of magnets and the sine-Gordon model (upon taking certain limits) in a physical sense, in that physical observables (correlation functions) calculated in one model can be used to calculate physical observables in another model. This aided the understanding of the BKT transition, and the discoverers earned a Nobel prize in physics for their work on this phase transition.[1]

Formulation

[edit]

The setup starts with considering charged particles in with positions and charges . From electrostatics, the pairwise potential energy between particles labelled by indices is (up to scale factor)

where is the Coulomb kernel or Green's function of the Laplace equation in dimensions,[2] so The free energy due to these interactions is then (proportional to) , and the partition function is given by integrating over different configurations, that is, the positions of the charged particles.

Coulomb gas in conformal field theory

[edit]

The two-dimensional Coulomb gas can be used as a framework for describing fields in minimal models. This comes from the similarity of the two-point correlation function of the free boson , to the electric potential energy between two unit charges in two dimensions.[3]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Kosterlitz, J M; Thouless, D J (12 April 1973). "Ordering, metastability and phase transitions in two-dimensional systems". Journal of Physics C: Solid State Physics. 6 (7): 1181–1203. doi:10.1088/0022-3719/6/7/010. Retrieved 28 July 2023.
  2. ^ Chafaï, Djalil (24 August 2021). "Aspects of Coulomb gases". arXiv:2108.10653.
  3. ^ Di Francesco, Philippe; Mathieu, Pierre; Sénéchal, David (1997). Conformal Field Theory. Retrieved 22 August 2023.