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Landau theory

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Theory of continuous phase transitions
Not to be confused withGinzburg–Landau theory.

Landau theory (also known asGinzburg–Landau theory, despite the confusing name[1]) inphysics is a theory thatLev Landau introduced in an attempt to formulate a general theory of continuous (i.e., second-order)phase transitions.[2] It can also be adapted to systems under externally-applied fields, and used as a quantitative model for discontinuous (i.e., first-order) transitions. Although the theory has now been superseded by therenormalization group and scaling theory formulations, it remains an exceptionally broad and powerful framework for phase transitions, and the associated concept of theorder parameter as a descriptor of the essential character of the transition has proven transformative.

Mean-field formulation (no long-range correlation)

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Main article:Mean field theory

Landau was motivated to suggest that the free energy of any system should obey two conditions:

  • Be analytic in the order parameter and its gradients.
  • Obey the symmetry of theHamiltonian.

Given these two conditions, one can write down (in the vicinity of the critical temperature,Tc) a phenomenological expression for the free energy as aTaylor expansion in theorder parameter.

Second-order transitions

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Sketch of free energy as a function of order parameterη{\displaystyle \eta }

Consider a system that breaks some symmetry below a phase transition, which is characterized by an order parameterη{\displaystyle \eta }. This order parameter is a measure of the order before and after a phase transition; the order parameter is often zero above some critical temperature and non-zero below the critical temperature. In a simple ferromagnetic system like theIsing model, the order parameter is characterized by the net magnetizationm{\displaystyle m}, which becomes spontaneously non-zero below a critical temperatureTc{\displaystyle T_{c}}. In Landau theory, one considers a free energy functional that is an analytic function of the order parameter. In many systems with certain symmetries, the free energy will only be a function of even powers of the order parameter, for which it can be expressed as the series expansion[3]

F(T,η)F0=a(T)η2+b(T)2η4+{\displaystyle F(T,\eta )-F_{0}=a(T)\eta ^{2}+{\frac {b(T)}{2}}\eta ^{4}+\cdots }

In general, there are higher order terms present in the free energy, but it is a reasonable approximation to consider the series to fourth order in the order parameter, as long as the order parameter is small. For the system to be thermodynamically stable (that is, the system does not seek an infinite order parameter to minimize the energy), the coefficient of the highest even power of the order parameter must be positive, sob(T)>0{\displaystyle b(T)>0}. For simplicity, one can assume thatb(T)=b0{\displaystyle b(T)=b_{0}}, a constant, near the critical temperature. Furthermore, sincea(T){\displaystyle a(T)} changes sign above and below the critical temperature, one can likewise expanda(T)a0(TTc){\displaystyle a(T)\approx a_{0}(T-T_{c})}, where it is assumed thata>0{\displaystyle a>0} for the high-temperature phase whilea<0{\displaystyle a<0} for the low-temperature phase, for a transition to occur. With these assumptions, minimizing the free energy with respect to the order parameter requires

Fη=2a(T)η+2b(T)η3=0{\displaystyle {\frac {\partial F}{\partial \eta }}=2a(T)\eta +2b(T)\eta ^{3}=0}

The solution to the order parameter that satisfies this condition is eitherη=0{\displaystyle \eta =0}, or

η02=ab=a0b0(TTc){\displaystyle \eta _{0}^{2}=-{\frac {a}{b}}=-{\frac {a_{0}}{b_{0}}}(T-T_{c})}
Order parameter and specific heat as a function of temperature

It is clear that this solution only exists forT<Tc{\displaystyle T<T_{c}}, otherwiseη=0{\displaystyle \eta =0} is the only solution. Indeed,η=0{\displaystyle \eta =0} is the minimum solution forT>Tc{\displaystyle T>T_{c}}, but the solutionη0{\displaystyle \eta _{0}} minimizes the free energy forT<Tc{\displaystyle T<T_{c}}, and thus is a stable phase. Furthermore, the order parameter follows the relation

η(T)|TTc|1/2{\displaystyle \eta (T)\propto \left|T-T_{c}\right|^{1/2}}

below the critical temperature, indicating acritical exponentβ=1/2{\displaystyle \beta =1/2} for this Landau mean-theory model.

The free-energy will vary as a function of temperature given by

FF0={a022b0(TTc)2,T<Tc0,T>Tc{\displaystyle F-F_{0}={\begin{cases}-{\dfrac {a_{0}^{2}}{2b_{0}}}(T-T_{c})^{2},&T<T_{c}\\0,&T>T_{c}\end{cases}}}

From the free energy, one can compute the specific heat,

cp=T2FT2={a02b0T,T<Tc0,T>Tc{\displaystyle c_{p}=-T{\frac {\partial ^{2}F}{\partial T^{2}}}={\begin{cases}{\dfrac {a_{0}^{2}}{b_{0}}}T,&T<T_{c}\\0,&T>T_{c}\end{cases}}}

which has a finite jump at the critical temperature of sizeΔc=a02Tc/b0{\displaystyle \Delta c=a_{0}^{2}T_{c}/b_{0}}. This finite jump is therefore not associated with a discontinuity that would occur if the system absorbedlatent heat, sinceTcΔS=0{\displaystyle T_{c}\Delta S=0}. It is also noteworthy that the discontinuity in the specific heat is related to the discontinuity in thesecond derivative of the free energy, which is characteristic of asecond-order phase transition. Furthermore, the fact that the specific heat has no divergence or cusp at the critical point indicates its critical exponent forc|TTc|α{\displaystyle c\sim |T-T_{c}|^{-\alpha }} isα=0{\displaystyle \alpha =0}.

Irreducible representations

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Landau expanded his theory to consider the restraints that it imposes on the symmetries before and after a transition of second order. They need to comply with a number of requirements:

  • The distorted (or ordered) symmetry needs to be a subgroup of the higher one.
  • The order parameter that embodies the distortion needs to transform as a singleirreducible representation (irrep) of the parent symmetry
  • The irrep should not contain a third order invariant
  • If the irrep allows for more than one fourth order invariant, the resulting symmetry minimizes a linear combination of these invariants

In the latter case more than one daughter structure should be reacheable through a continuous transition. A good example of this are the structure of MnP (space group Cmca) and the low temperature structure of NbS (space group P63mc). They are both daughters of the NiAs-structure and their distortions transform according to the same irrep of that spacegroup.[4]

Applied fields

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In many systems, one can consider a perturbing fieldh{\displaystyle h} that couples linearly to the order parameter. For example, in the case of a classicaldipole momentμ{\displaystyle \mu }, the energy of the dipole-field system isμB{\displaystyle -\mu B}. In the general case, one can assume an energy shift ofηh{\displaystyle -\eta h} due to the coupling of the order parameter to the applied fieldh{\displaystyle h}, and the Landau free energy will change as a result:

F(T,η)F0=a0(TTc)η2+b02η4ηh{\displaystyle F(T,\eta )-F_{0}=a_{0}(T-T_{c})\eta ^{2}+{\frac {b_{0}}{2}}\eta ^{4}-\eta h}

In this case, the minimization condition is

Fη=2a(T)η+2b0η3h=0{\displaystyle {\frac {\partial F}{\partial \eta }}=2a(T)\eta +2b_{0}\eta ^{3}-h=0}

One immediate consequence of this equation and its solution is that, if the applied field is non-zero, then the magnetization is non-zero at any temperature. This implies there is no longer a spontaneous symmetry breaking that occurs at any temperature. Furthermore, some interesting thermodynamic and universal quantities can be obtained from this above condition. For example, at the critical temperature wherea(Tc)=0{\displaystyle a(T_{c})=0}, one can find the dependence of the order parameter on the external field:

η(Tc)=(h2b0)1/3h1/δ{\displaystyle \eta (T_{c})=\left({\frac {h}{2b_{0}}}\right)^{1/3}\propto h^{1/\delta }}

indicating a critical exponentδ=3{\displaystyle \delta =3}.

Zero-field susceptibility as a function of temperature near the critical temperature

Furthermore, from the above condition, it is possible to find the zero-field susceptibilityχη/h|h=0{\displaystyle \chi \equiv \partial \eta /\partial h|_{h=0}}, which must satisfy

0=2aηh+6bη2ηh1{\displaystyle 0=2a{\frac {\partial \eta }{\partial h}}+6b\eta ^{2}{\frac {\partial \eta }{\partial h}}-1}
[2a+6bη2]ηh=1{\displaystyle [2a+6b\eta ^{2}]{\frac {\partial \eta }{\partial h}}=1}

In this case, recalling in the zero-field case thatη2=a/b{\displaystyle \eta ^{2}=-a/b} at low temperatures, whileη2=0{\displaystyle \eta ^{2}=0} for temperatures above the critical temperature, the zero-field susceptibility therefore has the following temperature dependence:

χ(T,h0)={12a0(TTc),T>Tc14a0(TTc),T<Tc|TTc|γ{\displaystyle \chi (T,h\to 0)={\begin{cases}{\frac {1}{2a_{0}(T-T_{c})}},&T>T_{c}\\{\frac {1}{-4a_{0}(T-T_{c})}},&T<T_{c}\end{cases}}\propto |T-T_{c}|^{-\gamma }}

which is reminiscent of theCurie-Weiss law for the temperature dependence of magnetic susceptibility in magnetic materials, and yields the mean-field critical exponentγ=1{\displaystyle \gamma =1}.

It is noteworthy that although the critical exponents so obtained are incorrect for many models and systems, they correctly satisfy various exponent equalities such as theRushbrooke equality:α+2β+γ=2{\displaystyle \alpha +2\beta +\gamma =2}.

First-order transitions

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Landau theory can also be used to studyfirst-order transitions. There are two different formulations, depending on whether or not the system is symmetric under a change in sign of the order parameter.

I. Symmetric Case

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Here we consider the case where the system has a symmetry and the energy is invariant when the order parameter changes sign.A first-order transition will arise if the quartic term inF{\displaystyle F} is negative. To ensure that the free energy remains positive at largeη{\displaystyle \eta }, one must carry the free-energy expansion to sixth-order,[5][6]

F(T,η)=A(T)η2B0η4+C0η6,{\displaystyle F(T,\eta )=A(T)\eta ^{2}-B_{0}\eta ^{4}+C_{0}\eta ^{6},}

whereA(T)=A0(TT0){\displaystyle A(T)=A_{0}(T-T_{0})}, andT0{\displaystyle T_{0}} is some temperature at whichA(T){\displaystyle A(T)} changes sign. We denote this temperature byT0{\displaystyle T_{0}} and notTc{\displaystyle T_{c}}, since it will emerge below that it is not the temperature of the first-order transition, and since there is no critical point, the notion of a "critical temperature" is misleading to begin with.A0,B0,{\displaystyle A_{0},B_{0},} andC0{\displaystyle C_{0}} are positive coefficients.

We analyze this free energy functional as follows: (i) ForT>T0{\displaystyle T>T_{0}}, theη2{\displaystyle \eta ^{2}} andη6{\displaystyle \eta ^{6}} terms are concave upward for allη{\displaystyle \eta }, while theη4{\displaystyle \eta ^{4}} term is concave downward. Thus for sufficiently high temperaturesF{\displaystyle F} is concave upward for allη{\displaystyle \eta }, and the equilibrium solution isη=0{\displaystyle \eta =0}. (ii) ForT<T0{\displaystyle T<T_{0}}, both theη2{\displaystyle \eta ^{2}} andη4{\displaystyle \eta ^{4}} terms are negative, soη=0{\displaystyle \eta =0} is a local maximum, and the minimum ofF{\displaystyle F} is at some non-zero value±η0(T){\displaystyle \pm \eta _{0}(T)}, withF(T0,η0(T0))<0{\displaystyle F(T_{0},\eta _{0}(T_{0}))<0}. (iii) ForT{\displaystyle T} just aboveT0{\displaystyle T_{0}},η=0{\displaystyle \eta =0} turns into a local minimum, but the minimum atη0(T){\displaystyle \eta _{0}(T)} continues to be the global minimum since it has a lower free energy. It follows that as the temperature is raised aboveT0{\displaystyle T_{0}}, the global minimum cannot continuously evolve fromη0(T){\displaystyle \eta _{0}(T)} to 0. Rather, at some intermediate temperatureT{\displaystyle T_{*}}, the minima atη0(T){\displaystyle \eta _{0}(T_{*})} andη=0{\displaystyle \eta =0} must become degenerate. ForT>T{\displaystyle T>T_{*}}, the global minimum will jump discontinuously fromη0(T){\displaystyle \eta _{0}(T_{*})} to 0.

To findT{\displaystyle T_{*}}, we demand that free energy be zero atη=η0(T){\displaystyle \eta =\eta _{0}(T_{*})} (just like theη=0{\displaystyle \eta =0} solution), and furthermore that this point should be a local minimum. These two conditions yield two equations,

0=A(T)η2B0η4+C0η6,{\displaystyle 0=A(T)\eta ^{2}-B_{0}\eta ^{4}+C_{0}\eta ^{6},}
0=2A(T)η4B0η3+6C0η5,{\displaystyle 0=2A(T)\eta -4B_{0}\eta ^{3}+6C_{0}\eta ^{5},}
First-order phase transition demonstrated in the discontinuity of the order parameter as a function of temperature

which are satisfied whenη2(T)=B0/2C0{\displaystyle \eta ^{2}(T_{*})={B_{0}}/{2C_{0}}}. The same equations also imply thatA(T)=A0(TT0)=B02/4C0{\displaystyle A(T_{*})=A_{0}(T_{*}-T_{0})=B_{0}^{2}/4C_{0}}. That is,

T=T0+B024A0C0.{\displaystyle T_{*}=T_{0}+{\frac {B_{0}^{2}}{4A_{0}C_{0}}}.}

From this analysis both points made above can be seen explicitly. First, the order parameter suffers a discontinuous jump from(B0/2C0)1/2{\displaystyle (B_{0}/2C_{0})^{1/2}} to 0. Second, the transition temperatureT{\displaystyle T_{*}} is not the same as the temperatureT0{\displaystyle T_{0}} whereA(T){\displaystyle A(T)} vanishes.

At temperatures below the transition temperature,T<T{\displaystyle T<T_{*}}, the order parameter is given by

η02=B03C0[1+13A(T)C0B02]{\displaystyle \eta _{0}^{2}={\frac {B_{0}}{3C_{0}}}\left[1+{\sqrt {1-{\frac {3A(T)C_{0}}{B_{0}^{2}}}}}\right]}

which is plotted to the right. This shows the clear discontinuity associated with the order parameter as a function of the temperature. To further demonstrate that the transition is first-order, one can show that the free energy for this order parameter is continuous at the transition temperatureT{\displaystyle T_{*}}, but its first derivative (the entropy) suffers from a discontinuity, reflecting the existence of a non-zero latent heat.

II. Nonsymmetric Case

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Next we consider the case where the system does not have a symmetry. In this case there is no reason to keep only even powers ofη{\displaystyle \eta } in the expansion ofF{\displaystyle F}, and a cubic term must be allowed (The linear term can always be eliminated by a shiftηη{\displaystyle \eta \to \eta } + constant.) We thus consider a free energy functional

F(T,η)=A(T)η2C0η3+B0η4+.{\displaystyle F(T,\eta )=A(T)\eta ^{2}-C_{0}\eta ^{3}+B_{0}\eta ^{4}+\cdots .}

Once againA(T)=A0(TT0){\displaystyle A(T)=A_{0}(T-T_{0})}, andA0,B0,C0{\displaystyle A_{0},B_{0},C_{0}} are all positive. The sign of the cubic term can always be chosen to be negative as we have done by reversing the sign ofη{\displaystyle \eta } if necessary.

We analyze this free energy functional as follows: (i) ForT<T0{\displaystyle T<T_{0}}, we have a local maximum atη=0{\displaystyle \eta =0}, and since the free energy is bounded below, there must be two local minima at nonzero valuesη(T)<0{\displaystyle \eta _{-}(T)<0} andη+(T)>0{\displaystyle \eta _{+}(T)>0}. The cubic term ensures thatη+{\displaystyle \eta _{+}} is the global minimum since it is deeper. (ii) ForT{\displaystyle T} just aboveT0{\displaystyle T_{0}}, the minimum atη{\displaystyle \eta _{-}} disappears, the maximum atη=0{\displaystyle \eta =0} turns into a local minimum, but the minimum atη+{\displaystyle \eta _{+}} persists and continues to be the global minimum. As the temperature is further raised,F(T,η+(T)){\displaystyle F(T,\eta _{+}(T))} rises until it equals zero at some temperatureT{\displaystyle T_{*}}. AtT{\displaystyle T_{*}} we get a discontinuous jump in the global minimum fromη+(T){\displaystyle \eta _{+}(T_{*})} to 0. (The minima cannot coalesce for that would require the first three derivatives ofF{\displaystyle F} to vanish atη=0{\displaystyle \eta =0}.)

To findT{\displaystyle T_{*}}, we demand that free energy be zero atη=η+(T){\displaystyle \eta =\eta _{+}(T_{*})} (just like theη=0{\displaystyle \eta =0} solution), and furthermore that this point should be a local minimum. These two conditions yield two equations,

0=A(T)η2C0η3+B0η4,{\displaystyle 0=A(T)\eta ^{2}-C_{0}\eta ^{3}+B_{0}\eta ^{4},}
0=2A(T)η3C0η2+4B0η3,{\displaystyle 0=2A(T)\eta -3C_{0}\eta ^{2}+4B_{0}\eta ^{3},}

which are satisfied whenη(T)=C0/2B0{\displaystyle \eta (T_{*})={C_{0}}/{2B_{0}}}. The same equations also imply thatA(T)=A0(TT0)=C02/4B0{\displaystyle A(T_{*})=A_{0}(T_{*}-T_{0})=C_{0}^{2}/4B_{0}}. That is,

T=T0+C024A0B0.{\displaystyle T_{*}=T_{0}+{\frac {C_{0}^{2}}{4A_{0}B_{0}}}.}

As in the symmetric case the order parameter suffers a discontinuous jump from(C0/2B0){\displaystyle (C_{0}/2B_{0})} to 0. Second, the transition temperatureT{\displaystyle T_{*}} is not the same as the temperatureT0{\displaystyle T_{0}} whereA(T){\displaystyle A(T)} vanishes.

Applications

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It was known experimentally that the liquid–gas coexistence curve and the ferromagnet magnetization curve both exhibited a scaling relation of the form|TTc|β{\displaystyle |T-T_{c}|^{\beta }}, whereβ{\displaystyle \beta } was mysteriously the same for both systems. This is the phenomenon ofuniversality. It was also known that simple liquid–gas models are exactly mappable to simple magnetic models, which implied that the two systems possess the same symmetries. It then followed from Landau theory why these two apparently disparate systems should have the same critical exponents, despite having different microscopic parameters. It is now known that the phenomenon ofuniversality arises for other reasons (seeRenormalization group). In fact, Landau theory predicts the incorrect critical exponents for the Ising and liquid–gas systems.

The great virtue of Landau theory is that it makes specific predictions for what kind of non-analytic behavior one should see when the underlying free energy is analytic. Then, all the non-analyticity at the critical point, the critical exponents, are because theequilibrium value of the order parameter changes non-analytically, as a square root, whenever the free energy loses its unique minimum.

The extension of Landau theory to include fluctuations in the order parameter shows that Landau theory is only strictly valid near the critical points of ordinary systems with spatial dimensions higher than 4. This is theupper critical dimension, and it can be much higher than four in more finely tuned phase transition. InMukhamel's analysis of the isotropic Lifschitz point, the critical dimension is 8. This is because Landau theory is amean field theory, and does not include long-range correlations.

This theory does not explain non-analyticity at the critical point, but when applied tosuperfluid and superconductor phase transition, Landau's theory provided inspiration for another theory, theGinzburg–Landau theory ofsuperconductivity.

Including long-range correlations

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Consider the Ising model free energy above. Assume that the order parameterΨ{\displaystyle \Psi } and external magnetic field,h{\displaystyle h}, may have spatial variations. Now, the free energy of the system can be assumed to take the following modified form:

F:=dDx (a(T)+r(T)ψ2(x)+s(T)ψ4(x) +f(T)(ψ(x))2 +h(x)ψ(x)  +O(ψ6;(ψ)4)){\displaystyle F:=\int d^{D}x\ \left(a(T)+r(T)\psi ^{2}(x)+s(T)\psi ^{4}(x)\ +f(T)(\nabla \psi (x))^{2}\ +h(x)\psi (x)\ \ +{\mathcal {O}}(\psi ^{6};(\nabla \psi )^{4})\right)}

whereD{\displaystyle D} is the totalspatial dimensionality. So,

ψ(x):=Tr ψ(x)eβHZ{\displaystyle \langle \psi (x)\rangle :={\frac {{\text{Tr}}\ \psi (x){\rm {e}}^{-\beta H}}{Z}}}

Assume that, for alocalized external magnetic perturbationh(x)0+h0δ(x){\displaystyle h(x)\rightarrow 0+h_{0}\delta (x)}, the order parameter takes the formψ(x)ψ0+ϕ(x){\displaystyle \psi (x)\rightarrow \psi _{0}+\phi (x)}. Then,

δψ(x)δh(0)=ϕ(x)h0=β(ψ(x)ψ(0)ψ(x)ψ(0)){\displaystyle {\frac {\delta \langle \psi (x)\rangle }{\delta h(0)}}={\frac {\phi (x)}{h_{0}}}=\beta \left(\langle \psi (x)\psi (0)\rangle -\langle \psi (x)\rangle \langle \psi (0)\rangle \right)}

That is, the fluctuationϕ(x){\displaystyle \phi (x)} in the order parameter corresponds to the order-order correlation. Hence, neglecting this fluctuation (like in the earlier mean-field approach) corresponds to neglecting the order-order correlation, which diverges near the critical point.

One can also solve[7] forϕ(x){\displaystyle \phi (x)}, from which the scaling exponent,ν{\displaystyle \nu }, for correlation lengthξ(TTc)ν{\displaystyle \xi \sim (T-T_{c})^{-\nu }} can deduced. From these, theGinzburg criterion for theupper critical dimension for the validity of the Ising mean-field Landau theory (the one without long-range correlation) can be calculated as:

D2+2βν{\displaystyle D\geq 2+2{\frac {\beta }{\nu }}}

In our current Ising model, mean-field Landau theory givesβ=1/2=ν{\displaystyle \beta =1/2=\nu } and so, it (the Ising mean-field Landau theory) is valid only for spatial dimensionality greater than or equal to 4 (at the marginal values ofD=4{\displaystyle D=4}, there are small corrections to the exponents). This modified version of mean-field Landau theory is sometimes also referred to as the Landau–Ginzburg theory of Ising phase transitions. As a clarification, there is also aGinzburg–Landau theory specific to superconductivity phase transition, which also includes fluctuations.

See also

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Footnotes

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  1. ^Hohenberg, P. C.; Krekhov, A. P. (2015-04-04)."An introduction to the Ginzburg–Landau theory of phase transitions and nonequilibrium patterns".Physics Reports.572:1–42.arXiv:1410.7285.Bibcode:2015PhR...572....1H.doi:10.1016/j.physrep.2015.01.001.ISSN 0370-1573.
  2. ^Lev D. Landau (1937)."On the Theory of Phase Transitions"(PDF).Zh. Eksp. Teor. Fiz.7: 19-32. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on Dec 14, 2015.
  3. ^Landau, L.D.; Lifshitz, E.M. (2013).Statistical Physics. Vol. 5. Elsevier.ISBN 978-0080570464.
  4. ^Franzen, H.F.; Haas, C.; Jellinek, F. (1974). "Phase transitions between NiAs- and MnP-type phases".Phys. Rev. B.10 (4):1248–1251.Bibcode:1974PhRvB..10.1248F.doi:10.1103/PhysRevB.10.1248.
  5. ^Tolédano, J.C.; Tolédano, P. (1987). "Chapter 5: First-Order Transitions".The Landau Theory of Phase Transitions. World Scientific Publishing Company.ISBN 9813103949.
  6. ^Stoof, H.T.C.; Gubbels, K.B.; Dickerscheid, D.B.M. (2009).Ultracold Quantum Fields. Springer.ISBN 978-1-4020-8763-9.
  7. ^"Equilibrium Statistical Physics" by Michael Plischke, Birger Bergersen, Section 3.10, 3rd ed

Further reading

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  • Landau L.D.Collected Papers (Nauka, Moscow, 1969)
  • Michael C. Cross,Landau theory of second order phase transitions,[1] (Caltech statistical mechanics lecture notes).
  • Yukhnovskii, I R,Phase Transitions of the Second Order – Collective Variables Method, World Scientific, 1987,ISBN 9971-5-0087-6
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