Conformal field theory of the 2D Ising model critical point
The two-dimensional critical Ising model is the critical limit of the Ising model in two dimensions. It is a two-dimensional conformal field theory whose symmetry algebra is the Virasoro algebra with the central charge c = 1 2 {\displaystyle c={\tfrac {1}{2}}} . Correlation functions of the spin and energy operators are described by the ( 4 , 3 ) {\displaystyle (4,3)} minimal model . While the minimal model has been exactly solved (see Ising critical exponents ), the solution does not cover other observables such as connectivities of clusters.
The Kac table of the ( 4 , 3 ) {\displaystyle (4,3)} minimal model is:
2 1 2 1 16 0 1 0 1 16 1 2 1 2 3 {\displaystyle {\begin{array}{c|ccc}2&{\frac {1}{2}}&{\frac {1}{16}}&0\\1&0&{\frac {1}{16}}&{\frac {1}{2}}\\\hline &1&2&3\end{array}}} This means that the space of states is generated by three primary states , which correspond to three primary fields or operators:[ 1]
Kac table indices Dimension Primary field Name ( 1 , 1 ) or ( 3 , 2 ) 0 1 Identity ( 2 , 1 ) or ( 2 , 2 ) 1 16 σ Spin ( 1 , 2 ) or ( 3 , 1 ) 1 2 ϵ Energy {\displaystyle {\begin{array}{cccc}\hline {\text{Kac table indices}}&{\text{Dimension}}&{\text{Primary field}}&{\text{Name}}\\\hline (1,1){\text{ or }}(3,2)&0&\mathbf {1} &{\text{Identity}}\\(2,1){\text{ or }}(2,2)&{\frac {1}{16}}&\sigma &{\text{Spin}}\\(1,2){\text{ or }}(3,1)&{\frac {1}{2}}&\epsilon &{\text{Energy}}\\\hline \end{array}}} The decomposition of the space of states into irreducible representations of the product of the left- and right-moving Virasoro algebras is
S = R 0 ⊗ R ¯ 0 ⊕ R 1 16 ⊗ R ¯ 1 16 ⊕ R 1 2 ⊗ R ¯ 1 2 {\displaystyle {\mathcal {S}}={\mathcal {R}}_{0}\otimes {\bar {\mathcal {R}}}_{0}\oplus {\mathcal {R}}_{\frac {1}{16}}\otimes {\bar {\mathcal {R}}}_{\frac {1}{16}}\oplus {\mathcal {R}}_{\frac {1}{2}}\otimes {\bar {\mathcal {R}}}_{\frac {1}{2}}} where R Δ {\displaystyle {\mathcal {R}}_{\Delta }} is the irreducible highest-weight representation of the Virasoro algebra with the conformal dimension Δ {\displaystyle \Delta } . In particular, the Ising model is diagonal and unitary.
Characters and partition function [ edit ] The characters of the three representations of the Virasoro algebra that appear in the space of states are[ 1]
χ 0 ( q ) = 1 η ( q ) ∑ k ∈ Z ( q ( 24 k + 1 ) 2 48 − q ( 24 k + 7 ) 2 48 ) = 1 2 η ( q ) ( θ 3 ( 0 | q ) + θ 4 ( 0 | q ) ) χ 1 16 ( q ) = 1 η ( q ) ∑ k ∈ Z ( q ( 24 k + 2 ) 2 48 − q ( 24 k + 10 ) 2 48 ) = 1 2 η ( q ) ( θ 3 ( 0 | q ) − θ 4 ( 0 | q ) ) χ 1 2 ( q ) = 1 η ( q ) ∑ k ∈ Z ( q ( 24 k + 5 ) 2 48 − q ( 24 k + 11 ) 2 48 ) = 1 2 η ( q ) θ 2 ( 0 | q ) {\displaystyle {\begin{aligned}\chi _{0}(q)&={\frac {1}{\eta (q)}}\sum _{k\in \mathbb {Z} }\left(q^{\frac {(24k+1)^{2}}{48}}-q^{\frac {(24k+7)^{2}}{48}}\right)={\frac {1}{2{\sqrt {\eta (q)}}}}\left({\sqrt {\theta _{3}(0|q)}}+{\sqrt {\theta _{4}(0|q)}}\right)\\\chi _{\frac {1}{16}}(q)&={\frac {1}{\eta (q)}}\sum _{k\in \mathbb {Z} }\left(q^{\frac {(24k+2)^{2}}{48}}-q^{\frac {(24k+10)^{2}}{48}}\right)={\frac {1}{2{\sqrt {\eta (q)}}}}\left({\sqrt {\theta _{3}(0|q)}}-{\sqrt {\theta _{4}(0|q)}}\right)\\\chi _{\frac {1}{2}}(q)&={\frac {1}{\eta (q)}}\sum _{k\in \mathbb {Z} }\left(q^{\frac {(24k+5)^{2}}{48}}-q^{\frac {(24k+11)^{2}}{48}}\right)={\frac {1}{\sqrt {2\eta (q)}}}{\sqrt {\theta _{2}(0|q)}}\end{aligned}}} where η ( q ) {\displaystyle \eta (q)} is the Dedekind eta function , and θ i ( 0 | q ) {\displaystyle \theta _{i}(0|q)} are theta functions of the nome q = e 2 π i τ {\displaystyle q=e^{2\pi i\tau }} , for example θ 3 ( 0 | q ) = ∑ n ∈ Z q n 2 2 {\displaystyle \theta _{3}(0|q)=\sum _{n\in \mathbb {Z} }q^{\frac {n^{2}}{2}}} . The modular S-matrix , i.e. the matrix S {\displaystyle {\mathcal {S}}} such that χ i ( − 1 τ ) = ∑ j S i j χ j ( τ ) {\displaystyle \chi _{i}(-{\tfrac {1}{\tau }})=\sum _{j}{\mathcal {S}}_{ij}\chi _{j}(\tau )} , is[ 1]
S = 1 2 ( 1 1 2 1 1 − 2 2 − 2 0 ) {\displaystyle {\mathcal {S}}={\frac {1}{2}}\left({\begin{array}{ccc}1&1&{\sqrt {2}}\\1&1&-{\sqrt {2}}\\{\sqrt {2}}&-{\sqrt {2}}&0\end{array}}\right)} where the fields are ordered as 1 , ϵ , σ {\displaystyle 1,\epsilon ,\sigma } . The modular invariant partition function is
Z ( q ) = | χ 0 ( q ) | 2 + | χ 1 16 ( q ) | 2 + | χ 1 2 ( q ) | 2 = | θ 2 ( 0 | q ) | + | θ 3 ( 0 | q ) | + | θ 4 ( 0 | q ) | 2 | η ( q ) | {\displaystyle Z(q)=\left|\chi _{0}(q)\right|^{2}+\left|\chi _{\frac {1}{16}}(q)\right|^{2}+\left|\chi _{\frac {1}{2}}(q)\right|^{2}={\frac {|\theta _{2}(0|q)|+|\theta _{3}(0|q)|+|\theta _{4}(0|q)|}{2|\eta (q)|}}} Fusion rules and operator product expansions [ edit ] The fusion rules of the model are
1 × 1 = 1 1 × σ = σ 1 × ϵ = ϵ σ × σ = 1 + ϵ σ × ϵ = σ ϵ × ϵ = 1 {\displaystyle {\begin{aligned}\mathbf {1} \times \mathbf {1} &=\mathbf {1} \\\mathbf {1} \times \sigma &=\sigma \\\mathbf {1} \times \epsilon &=\epsilon \\\sigma \times \sigma &=\mathbf {1} +\epsilon \\\sigma \times \epsilon &=\sigma \\\epsilon \times \epsilon &=\mathbf {1} \end{aligned}}} The fusion rules are invariant under the Z 2 {\displaystyle \mathbb {Z} _{2}} symmetry σ → − σ {\displaystyle \sigma \to -\sigma } . The three-point structure constants are
C 1 1 1 = C 1 ϵ ϵ = C 1 σ σ = 1 , C σ σ ϵ = 1 2 {\displaystyle C_{\mathbf {1} \mathbf {1} \mathbf {1} }=C_{\mathbf {1} \epsilon \epsilon }=C_{\mathbf {1} \sigma \sigma }=1\quad ,\quad C_{\sigma \sigma \epsilon }={\frac {1}{2}}} Knowing the fusion rules and three-point structure constants, it is possible to write operator product expansions, for example
σ ( z ) σ ( 0 ) = | z | 2 Δ 1 − 4 Δ σ C 1 σ σ ( 1 ( 0 ) + O ( z ) ) + | z | 2 Δ ϵ − 4 Δ σ C σ σ ϵ ( ϵ ( 0 ) + O ( z ) ) = | z | − 1 4 ( 1 ( 0 ) + O ( z ) ) + 1 2 | z | 3 4 ( ϵ ( 0 ) + O ( z ) ) {\displaystyle {\begin{aligned}\sigma (z)\sigma (0)&=|z|^{2\Delta _{\mathbf {1} }-4\Delta _{\sigma }}C_{\mathbf {1} \sigma \sigma }{\Big (}\mathbf {1} (0)+O(z){\Big )}+|z|^{2\Delta _{\epsilon }-4\Delta _{\sigma }}C_{\sigma \sigma \epsilon }{\Big (}\epsilon (0)+O(z){\Big )}\\&=|z|^{-{\frac {1}{4}}}{\Big (}\mathbf {1} (0)+O(z){\Big )}+{\frac {1}{2}}|z|^{\frac {3}{4}}{\Big (}\epsilon (0)+O(z){\Big )}\end{aligned}}} where Δ 1 , Δ σ , Δ ϵ {\displaystyle \Delta _{\mathbf {1} },\Delta _{\sigma },\Delta _{\epsilon }} are the conformal dimensions of the primary fields, and the omitted terms O ( z ) {\displaystyle O(z)} are contributions of descendant fields .
Correlation functions on the sphere [ edit ] Any one-, two- and three-point function of primary fields is determined by conformal symmetry up to a multiplicative constant. This constant is set to be one for one- and two-point functions by a choice of field normalizations. The only non-trivial dynamical quantities are the three-point structure constants, which were given above in the context of operator product expansions.
⟨ 1 ( z 1 ) ⟩ = 1 , ⟨ σ ( z 1 ) ⟩ = 0 , ⟨ ϵ ( z 1 ) ⟩ = 0 {\displaystyle \left\langle \mathbf {1} (z_{1})\right\rangle =1\ ,\ \left\langle \sigma (z_{1})\right\rangle =0\ ,\ \left\langle \epsilon (z_{1})\right\rangle =0} ⟨ 1 ( z 1 ) 1 ( z 2 ) ⟩ = 1 , ⟨ σ ( z 1 ) σ ( z 2 ) ⟩ = | z 12 | − 1 4 , ⟨ ϵ ( z 1 ) ϵ ( z 2 ) ⟩ = | z 12 | − 2 {\displaystyle \left\langle \mathbf {1} (z_{1})\mathbf {1} (z_{2})\right\rangle =1\ ,\ \left\langle \sigma (z_{1})\sigma (z_{2})\right\rangle =|z_{12}|^{-{\frac {1}{4}}}\ ,\ \left\langle \epsilon (z_{1})\epsilon (z_{2})\right\rangle =|z_{12}|^{-2}} with z i j = z i − z j {\displaystyle z_{ij}=z_{i}-z_{j}} .
⟨ 1 σ ⟩ = ⟨ 1 ϵ ⟩ = ⟨ σ ϵ ⟩ = 0 {\displaystyle \langle \mathbf {1} \sigma \rangle =\langle \mathbf {1} \epsilon \rangle =\langle \sigma \epsilon \rangle =0} ⟨ 1 ( z 1 ) 1 ( z 2 ) 1 ( z 3 ) ⟩ = 1 , ⟨ σ ( z 1 ) σ ( z 2 ) 1 ( z 3 ) ⟩ = | z 12 | − 1 4 , ⟨ ϵ ( z 1 ) ϵ ( z 2 ) 1 ( z 3 ) ⟩ = | z 12 | − 2 {\displaystyle \left\langle \mathbf {1} (z_{1})\mathbf {1} (z_{2})\mathbf {1} (z_{3})\right\rangle =1\ ,\ \left\langle \sigma (z_{1})\sigma (z_{2})\mathbf {1} (z_{3})\right\rangle =|z_{12}|^{-{\frac {1}{4}}}\ ,\ \left\langle \epsilon (z_{1})\epsilon (z_{2})\mathbf {1} (z_{3})\right\rangle =|z_{12}|^{-2}} ⟨ σ ( z 1 ) σ ( z 2 ) ϵ ( z 3 ) ⟩ = 1 2 | z 12 | 3 4 | z 13 | − 1 | z 23 | − 1 {\displaystyle \left\langle \sigma (z_{1})\sigma (z_{2})\epsilon (z_{3})\right\rangle ={\frac {1}{2}}|z_{12}|^{\frac {3}{4}}|z_{13}|^{-1}|z_{23}|^{-1}} ⟨ 1 1 σ ⟩ = ⟨ 1 1 ϵ ⟩ = ⟨ 1 σ ϵ ⟩ = ⟨ σ ϵ ϵ ⟩ = ⟨ σ σ σ ⟩ = ⟨ ϵ ϵ ϵ ⟩ = 0 {\displaystyle \langle \mathbf {1} \mathbf {1} \sigma \rangle =\langle \mathbf {1} \mathbf {1} \epsilon \rangle =\langle \mathbf {1} \sigma \epsilon \rangle =\langle \sigma \epsilon \epsilon \rangle =\langle \sigma \sigma \sigma \rangle =\langle \epsilon \epsilon \epsilon \rangle =0} The three non-trivial four-point functions are of the type ⟨ σ 4 ⟩ , ⟨ σ 2 ϵ 2 ⟩ , ⟨ ϵ 4 ⟩ {\displaystyle \langle \sigma ^{4}\rangle ,\langle \sigma ^{2}\epsilon ^{2}\rangle ,\langle \epsilon ^{4}\rangle } . For a four-point function ⟨ ∏ i = 1 4 V i ( z i ) ⟩ {\displaystyle \left\langle \prod _{i=1}^{4}V_{i}(z_{i})\right\rangle } , let F j ( s ) {\displaystyle {\mathcal {F}}_{j}^{(s)}} and F j ( t ) {\displaystyle {\mathcal {F}}_{j}^{(t)}} be the s- and t-channel Virasoro conformal blocks , which respectively correspond to the contributions of V j ( z 2 ) {\displaystyle V_{j}(z_{2})} (and its descendants) in the operator product expansion V 1 ( z 1 ) V 2 ( z 2 ) {\displaystyle V_{1}(z_{1})V_{2}(z_{2})} , and of V j ( z 4 ) {\displaystyle V_{j}(z_{4})} (and its descendants) in the operator product expansion V 1 ( z 1 ) V 4 ( z 4 ) {\displaystyle V_{1}(z_{1})V_{4}(z_{4})} . Let x = z 12 z 34 z 13 z 24 {\displaystyle x={\frac {z_{12}z_{34}}{z_{13}z_{24}}}} be the cross-ratio.
In the case of ⟨ ϵ 4 ⟩ {\displaystyle \langle \epsilon ^{4}\rangle } , fusion rules allow only one primary field in all channels, namely the identity field.[ 2]
⟨ ϵ 4 ⟩ = | F 1 ( s ) | 2 = | F 1 ( t ) | 2 F 1 ( s ) = F 1 ( t ) = [ ∏ 1 ≤ i < j ≤ 4 z i j − 1 3 ] 1 − x + x 2 x 2 3 ( 1 − x ) 2 3 = ( z i ) = ( x , 0 , ∞ , 1 ) 1 x ( 1 − x ) − 1 {\displaystyle {\begin{aligned}&\langle \epsilon ^{4}\rangle =\left|{\mathcal {F}}_{\textbf {1}}^{(s)}\right|^{2}=\left|{\mathcal {F}}_{\textbf {1}}^{(t)}\right|^{2}\\&{\mathcal {F}}_{\textbf {1}}^{(s)}={\mathcal {F}}_{\textbf {1}}^{(t)}=\left[\prod _{1\leq i<j\leq 4}z_{ij}^{-{\frac {1}{3}}}\right]{\frac {1-x+x^{2}}{x^{\frac {2}{3}}(1-x)^{\frac {2}{3}}}}\ {\underset {(z_{i})=(x,0,\infty ,1)}{=}}\ {\frac {1}{x(1-x)}}-1\end{aligned}}} In the case of ⟨ σ 2 ϵ 2 ⟩ {\displaystyle \langle \sigma ^{2}\epsilon ^{2}\rangle } , fusion rules allow only the identity field in the s-channel, and the spin field in the t-channel.[ 2]
⟨ σ 2 ϵ 2 ⟩ = | F 1 ( s ) | 2 = C σ σ ϵ 2 | F σ ( t ) | 2 = 1 4 | F σ ( t ) | 2 F 1 ( s ) = 1 2 F σ ( t ) = [ z 12 1 4 z 34 − 5 8 ( z 13 z 24 z 14 z 23 ) − 3 16 ] 1 − x 2 x 3 8 ( 1 − x ) 5 16 = ( z i ) = ( x , 0 , ∞ , 1 ) 1 − x 2 x 1 8 ( 1 − x ) 1 2 {\displaystyle {\begin{aligned}&\langle \sigma ^{2}\epsilon ^{2}\rangle =\left|{\mathcal {F}}_{\textbf {1}}^{(s)}\right|^{2}=C_{\sigma \sigma \epsilon }^{2}\left|{\mathcal {F}}_{\sigma }^{(t)}\right|^{2}={\frac {1}{4}}\left|{\mathcal {F}}_{\sigma }^{(t)}\right|^{2}\\&{\mathcal {F}}_{\textbf {1}}^{(s)}={\frac {1}{2}}{\mathcal {F}}_{\sigma }^{(t)}=\left[z_{12}^{\frac {1}{4}}z_{34}^{-{\frac {5}{8}}}\left(z_{13}z_{24}z_{14}z_{23}\right)^{-{\frac {3}{16}}}\right]{\frac {1-{\frac {x}{2}}}{x^{\frac {3}{8}}(1-x)^{\frac {5}{16}}}}\ {\underset {(z_{i})=(x,0,\infty ,1)}{=}}\ {\frac {1-{\frac {x}{2}}}{x^{\frac {1}{8}}(1-x)^{\frac {1}{2}}}}\end{aligned}}} In the case of ⟨ σ 4 ⟩ {\displaystyle \langle \sigma ^{4}\rangle } , fusion rules allow two primary fields in all channels: the identity field and the energy field.[ 2] In this case we write the conformal blocks in the case ( z 1 , z 2 , z 3 , z 4 ) = ( x , 0 , ∞ , 1 ) {\displaystyle (z_{1},z_{2},z_{3},z_{4})=(x,0,\infty ,1)} only: the general case is obtained by inserting the prefactor x 1 24 ( 1 − x ) 1 24 ∏ 1 ≤ i < j ≤ 4 z i j − 1 24 {\displaystyle x^{\frac {1}{24}}(1-x)^{\frac {1}{24}}\prod _{1\leq i<j\leq 4}z_{ij}^{-{\frac {1}{24}}}} , and identifying x {\displaystyle x} with the cross-ratio.
⟨ σ 4 ⟩ = | F 1 ( s ) | 2 + 1 4 | F ϵ ( s ) | 2 = | F 1 ( t ) | 2 + 1 4 | F ϵ ( t ) | 2 = | 1 + x | + | 1 − x | 2 | x | 1 4 | 1 − x | 1 4 = x ∈ ( 0 , 1 ) 1 | x | 1 4 | 1 − x | 1 4 {\displaystyle {\begin{aligned}\langle \sigma ^{4}\rangle &=\left|{\mathcal {F}}_{\textbf {1}}^{(s)}\right|^{2}+{\frac {1}{4}}\left|{\mathcal {F}}_{\epsilon }^{(s)}\right|^{2}=\left|{\mathcal {F}}_{\textbf {1}}^{(t)}\right|^{2}+{\frac {1}{4}}\left|{\mathcal {F}}_{\epsilon }^{(t)}\right|^{2}\\&={\frac {|1+{\sqrt {x}}|+|1-{\sqrt {x}}|}{2|x|^{\frac {1}{4}}|1-x|^{\frac {1}{4}}}}\ {\underset {x\in (0,1)}{=}}\ {\frac {1}{|x|^{\frac {1}{4}}|1-x|^{\frac {1}{4}}}}\end{aligned}}} In the case of ⟨ σ 4 ⟩ {\displaystyle \langle \sigma ^{4}\rangle } , the conformal blocks are:
F 1 ( s ) = 1 + 1 − x 2 x 1 8 ( 1 − x ) 1 8 , F ϵ ( s ) = 2 − 2 1 − x x 1 8 ( 1 − x ) 1 8 F 1 ( t ) = F 1 ( s ) 2 + F ϵ ( s ) 2 2 = 1 + x 2 x 1 8 ( 1 − x ) 1 8 , F ϵ ( t ) = 2 F 1 ( s ) − F ϵ ( s ) 2 = 2 − 2 x x 1 8 ( 1 − x ) 1 8 {\displaystyle {\begin{aligned}&{\mathcal {F}}_{\textbf {1}}^{(s)}={\frac {\sqrt {\frac {1+{\sqrt {1-x}}}{2}}}{x^{\frac {1}{8}}(1-x)^{\frac {1}{8}}}}\ ,\;\;{\mathcal {F}}_{\epsilon }^{(s)}={\frac {\sqrt {2-2{\sqrt {1-x}}}}{x^{\frac {1}{8}}(1-x)^{\frac {1}{8}}}}\\&{\mathcal {F}}_{\textbf {1}}^{(t)}={\frac {{\mathcal {F}}_{\textbf {1}}^{(s)}}{\sqrt {2}}}+{\frac {{\mathcal {F}}_{\epsilon }^{(s)}}{2{\sqrt {2}}}}={\frac {\sqrt {\frac {1+{\sqrt {x}}}{2}}}{x^{\frac {1}{8}}(1-x)^{\frac {1}{8}}}}\ ,\;\;{\mathcal {F}}_{\epsilon }^{(t)}={\sqrt {2}}{\mathcal {F}}_{\textbf {1}}^{(s)}-{\frac {{\mathcal {F}}_{\epsilon }^{(s)}}{\sqrt {2}}}={\frac {\sqrt {2-2{\sqrt {x}}}}{x^{\frac {1}{8}}(1-x)^{\frac {1}{8}}}}\end{aligned}}} From the representation of the model in terms of Dirac fermions , it is possible to compute correlation functions of any number of spin or energy operators:[ 1]
⟨ ∏ i = 1 2 n ϵ ( z i ) ⟩ 2 = | det ( 1 z i j ) 1 ≤ i ≠ j ≤ 2 n | 2 {\displaystyle \left\langle \prod _{i=1}^{2n}\epsilon (z_{i})\right\rangle ^{2}=\left|\det \left({\frac {1}{z_{ij}}}\right)_{1\leq i\neq j\leq 2n}\right|^{2}} ⟨ ∏ i = 1 2 n σ ( z i ) ⟩ 2 = 1 2 n ∑ ϵ i = ± 1 ∑ i = 1 2 n ϵ i = 0 ∏ 1 ≤ i < j ≤ 2 n | z i j | ϵ i ϵ j 2 {\displaystyle \left\langle \prod _{i=1}^{2n}\sigma (z_{i})\right\rangle ^{2}={\frac {1}{2^{n}}}\sum _{\begin{array}{c}\epsilon _{i}=\pm 1\\\sum _{i=1}^{2n}\epsilon _{i}=0\end{array}}\prod _{1\leq i<j\leq 2n}|z_{ij}|^{\frac {\epsilon _{i}\epsilon _{j}}{2}}} These formulas have generalizations to correlation functions on the torus, which involve theta functions .[ 1]
The two-dimensional Ising model is mapped to itself by a high-low temperature duality. The image of the spin operator σ {\displaystyle \sigma } under this duality is a disorder operator μ {\displaystyle \mu } , which has the same left and right conformal dimensions ( Δ μ , Δ ¯ μ ) = ( Δ σ , Δ ¯ σ ) = ( 1 16 , 1 16 ) {\displaystyle (\Delta _{\mu },{\bar {\Delta }}_{\mu })=(\Delta _{\sigma },{\bar {\Delta }}_{\sigma })=({\tfrac {1}{16}},{\tfrac {1}{16}})} . Although the disorder operator does not belong to the minimal model, correlation functions involving the disorder operator can be computed exactly, for example[ 1]
⟨ σ ( z 1 ) μ ( z 2 ) σ ( z 3 ) μ ( z 4 ) ⟩ 2 = 1 2 | z 13 z 24 | | z 12 z 34 z 23 z 14 | ( | x | + | 1 − x | − 1 ) {\displaystyle \left\langle \sigma (z_{1})\mu (z_{2})\sigma (z_{3})\mu (z_{4})\right\rangle ^{2}={\frac {1}{2}}{\sqrt {\frac {|z_{13}z_{24}|}{|z_{12}z_{34}z_{23}z_{14}|}}}{\Big (}|x|+|1-x|-1{\Big )}} whereas
⟨ ∏ i = 1 4 μ ( z i ) ⟩ 2 = ⟨ ∏ i = 1 4 σ ( z i ) ⟩ 2 = 1 2 | z 13 z 24 | | z 12 z 34 z 23 z 14 | ( | x | + | 1 − x | + 1 ) {\displaystyle \left\langle \prod _{i=1}^{4}\mu (z_{i})\right\rangle ^{2}=\left\langle \prod _{i=1}^{4}\sigma (z_{i})\right\rangle ^{2}={\frac {1}{2}}{\sqrt {\frac {|z_{13}z_{24}|}{|z_{12}z_{34}z_{23}z_{14}|}}}{\Big (}|x|+|1-x|+1{\Big )}} Connectivities of clusters [ edit ] The Ising model has a description as a random cluster model due to Fortuin and Kasteleyn. In this description, the natural observables are connectivities of clusters, i.e. probabilities that a number of points belong to the same cluster. The Ising model can then be viewed as the case q = 2 {\displaystyle q=2} of the q {\displaystyle q} -state Potts model , whose parameter q {\displaystyle q} can vary continuously, and is related to the central charge of the Virasoro algebra .
In the critical limit, connectivities of clusters have the same behaviour under conformal transformations as correlation functions of the spin operator. Nevertheless, connectivities do not coincide with spin correlation functions: for example, the three-point connectivity does not vanish, while ⟨ σ σ σ ⟩ = 0 {\displaystyle \langle \sigma \sigma \sigma \rangle =0} . There are four independent four-point connectivities, and their sum coincides with ⟨ σ σ σ σ ⟩ {\displaystyle \langle \sigma \sigma \sigma \sigma \rangle } .[ 3] Other combinations of four-point connectivities are not known analytically. In particular they are not related to correlation functions of the minimal model,[ 4] although they are related to the q → 2 {\displaystyle q\to 2} limit of spin correlators in the q {\displaystyle q} -state Potts model.[ 3]
^ a b c d e f P. Di Francesco, P. Mathieu, and D. Sénéchal, Conformal Field Theory , 1997, ISBN 0-387-94785-X ^ a b c Cheng, Miranda C. N.; Gannon, Terry; Lockhart, Guglielmo (2020-02-25). "Modular Exercises for Four-Point Blocks -- I". arXiv :2002.11125v1 [hep-th ]. ^ a b Delfino, Gesualdo; Viti, Jacopo (2011-04-21). "Potts q-color field theory and scaling random cluster model". Nuclear Physics B . 852 (1): 149– 173. arXiv :1104.4323v2 . Bibcode :2011NuPhB.852..149D . doi :10.1016/j.nuclphysb.2011.06.012 . S2CID 119183802 . ^ Delfino, Gesualdo; Viti, Jacopo (2010-09-07). "On three-point connectivity in two-dimensional percolation". Journal of Physics A: Mathematical and Theoretical . 44 (3): 032001. arXiv :1009.1314v1 . doi :10.1088/1751-8113/44/3/032001 . S2CID 119246430 .