Rudolf Peierls: Difference between revisions

From SklogWiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(Added Ref.)
m (Added an internal link)
 
(2 intermediate revisions by one other user not shown)
Line 3: Line 3:


==Peierls' argument==
==Peierls' argument==
The argument considers the entropy associated with the interface between domains with different orientations (Ref. 1).
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).


==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

This article is a 'stub' about a person. It has no, or next to no, content. It is here at the moment to help form part of the structure of SklogWiki. If you add material to this article remove the {{Stub-person}} template.

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