In explaining/introducing second-order phase transition using Ising system as an example, it is show

Brooklynn Hubbard

Brooklynn Hubbard

Answered question

2022-05-13

In explaining/introducing second-order phase transition using Ising system as an example, it is shown via mean-field theory that there are two magnetized phases below the critical temperature. This derivation is done for zero external magnetic field B=0 and termed spontaneous symmetry breaking The magnetic field is then called the symmetry breaking field. But, if the symmetry breaking occurs "spontaneously" at zero external field why do we need to call the external magnetic field the symmetry breaking field? I am confused by the terminology.

Answer & Explanation

glapaso7ng5

glapaso7ng5

Beginner2022-05-14Added 13 answers

This is mostly a question of definitions:
Spontaneous symmetry breaking occurs when the underlying laws of a physical system have a symmetry, but the ground state does not. For an Ising system with B=0,
H = i , j J i j s i s j
we can see explicitly that the energy of a state { s i } is precisely the same as the energy of the state with every spin flipped, { s i }. Nevertheless, the ground state does not have this symmetry - all of the spins are either up or down! There are a lot of subtleties to this idea, especially in how it relates to the limit of infinite system size - I really recommend reading Goldenfeld's Lectures on Phase Transitions and the Renormalization Group to understand this more deeply.
By contrast, with B 0, the symmetry is explicitly broken - the Hamiltonian
H = i , j J i j s i s j + B i s i
does not have the s s symmetry. These are two different ideas.
datomerki8a5yj

datomerki8a5yj

Beginner2022-05-15Added 5 answers

You don't need a B-field for spontaneous symmetry breaking to occur. In the Ising model, there is a term in the free energy which punishes misalignment of spins. For low enough temperatures (i.e. when the quadratic coefficient changes sign) this term dominates the usual entropy driven term. At that point symmetry is broken and you get non-zero expectation values for the magnetization. The term 'spontaneous symmetry breaking' is coined as there are infinite many minima of the corresponding action, but you choose only one. You can also consider the Ising model with an external field, the critical temperature shall be higher then because the B-field 'helps' the misalignment term I talked about above.

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