(Redirected from Correlation length)
The
correlation function in
statistical mechanics is measure of the order in a system.
It tells us how microscopic variables at different positions are correlated.
In a
spin system, it is the thermal average of the scalar product of the spins at two
lattice points over all possible orderings.
The correlation function is hence,
:
Even in a disordered phase,spins at different positions are correlated.
The alignment that would naturally arise as a result of the interaction between spins is destroyed by thermal effects. At high temperatures one sees an exponential correlation with the correlation function
being given by,
:
where
is what is called the correlation length, r is the distance between spins
and d is the dimension of the system.
As the temperature is lowered, thermal disordering is lowered and the correlation length increases.
In second order
phase transitions, the correlation length diverges at the
critical point,
leading to a
power law correlation, that is responsible for
scaling, seen in these
transitions.
The power in the power law is independent of temperature.
It is in fact
universal, i.e found to be the same in a wide variety of systems.
One very important correlation function is the
radial distribution function which is seen often in
statistical mechanics.