Binder cumulant: Difference between revisions

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Latest revision as of 16:31, 4 January 2012

The Binder cumulant was introduced by Kurt Binder in the context of finite size scaling. It is a quantity that allows to locate the critical point and critical exponents. For an Ising model with zero field, it is given by

where m is the order parameter, i.e. the magnetization. It is therefore a fourth order cumulant, related to the kurtosis. In the thermodynamic limit, where the system size , for , and for . Thus, the function is discontinuous in this limit. An important observation is that the intersection points of the cumulants for different system sizes usually depend only rather weakly on those sizes, providing a convenient estimate for the value of the critical temperature. Caution is needed in identifying the universality class from the critical value of the Binder cumulant, because that value depends on boundary condition, system shape, and anisotropy of correlations.

References[edit]

  1. K. Binder "Finite size scaling analysis of ising model block distribution functions", Zeitschrift für Physik B Condensed Matter 43 pp. 119-140 (1981)