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author | Jaron Kent-Dobias <jaron@kent-dobias.com> | 2023-05-27 16:51:51 +0200 |
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committer | Jaron Kent-Dobias <jaron@kent-dobias.com> | 2023-05-27 16:51:51 +0200 |
commit | 2e272507f5225227c477a4c1068cf72825106cde (patch) | |
tree | e3f0b23e0c7ee93bf3219b0afb44e01c15933df7 /ising_scaling.tex | |
parent | e10a0bf22228557aab3b7c797ae40083498faaa9 (diff) | |
parent | ee052273c9d61e920f31984134c29cbc005d947e (diff) | |
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Merge branch 'master' into aps
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-rw-r--r-- | ising_scaling.tex | 10 |
1 files changed, 6 insertions, 4 deletions
diff --git a/ising_scaling.tex b/ising_scaling.tex index c454e43..5881786 100644 --- a/ising_scaling.tex +++ b/ising_scaling.tex @@ -181,7 +181,7 @@ use $\xi=u_h|u_t|^{-\Delta}$ and $\eta=u_t|u_h|^{-1/\Delta}$. The analyticity of the free energy at places away from the critical point implies that the functions $\mathcal F_\pm$ and $\mathcal F_0$ have power-law expansions of their arguments about zero, the result of so-called Griffiths -analyticity. For instance, when $u_t$ goes to zero for nonzero $u_h$ there is +analyticity \cite{Griffiths_1967_Thermodynamic}. For instance, when $u_t$ goes to zero for nonzero $u_h$ there is no phase transition, and the free energy must be an analytic function of its arguments. It follows that $\mathcal F_0$ is analytic about zero. This is not the case at infinity: since @@ -835,7 +835,7 @@ values of both are plotted. Free parameters in the fit of the parametric coordinate transformation and scaling form to known values of the scaling function series coefficients for $\mathcal F_\pm$. The fit at stage $n$ matches those coefficients up to - and including order $n$. Error estimates are difficult to quantify directly. + and including order $n$. Uncertainty estimates are difficult to quantify directly. } \label{tab:fits} \end{table} @@ -880,7 +880,7 @@ Fig.~\ref{fig:phi.series}. The series coefficients for the scaling function $\mathcal F_-$ as a function of polynomial order $m$. The numeric values are from Table \ref{tab:data}, and those of Caselle \textit{et al.} are from the most - accurate scaling function listed in \cite{Caselle_2001_The}. The deviation at high polynomial order illustrates the lack of the essential singularity in Caselle's form. + accurate scaling function listed in \cite{Caselle_2001_The}. The deviation at high polynomial order illustrates the lack of the essential singularity in the form of Caselle \textit{et al.}. } \label{fig:glow.series} \end{figure} @@ -951,7 +951,9 @@ the ratio. Sequential ratios of the series coefficients of the scaling function $\mathcal F_-$ as a function of inverse polynomial order $m$. The extrapolated $y$-intercept of this plot gives the radius of convergence of - the series, which should be zero due to the essential singularity (as seen in the known numeric values and in this work). Cassel {\em et al} do not incorporate the essential singularity. + the series, which should be zero due to the essential singularity (as seen + in the known numeric values and in this work). Caselle \textit{et al.} do + not incorporate the essential singularity. } \label{fig:glow.radius} \end{figure} |