Enrolment options

Venue:  Chern Lecture Hall

Class Timings: Wednesdays and Fridays from 1:45 PM to 3:15 PM

First Meeting: 7 January 2025 (Wednesday)

Course Description: 

This course will cover the following topics: 

(a) Phase transitions and critical phenomena
(b) Dynamics of many-body systems 
(c) Non-equilibrium phenomena

Syllabus:

Phase transitions and critical phenomena.
Critical exponents, scaling description, universality. 
Ginzburg-Landau theory, mean-field theory, fluctuations.
Kadanoff construction, renormalization group (RG) formalism, RG calculations in real and momentum space. 

Dynamics:

Linear response theory: response and correlation functions, fluctuation-dissipation relation, transport coefficients, Kubo formulae. 
Hydrodynamic description: Poisson brackets, hydrodynamics of normal fluids and superfluids. 
Langevin equation and Fokker-Planck equation, critical dynamics.

Nonequilibrium phenomena: 

Kinetics of phase ordering: nucleation, spinodal decomposition, coarsening. 
Kinetics of film growth: Kardar-Parisi-Zhang and related equations. 
Ageing in glassy systems.
Dynamics of self-propelled systems. 

Textbooks:

  • Chaikin and Lubensky, Principles of Condensed Matter Physics (chapters 3-5,7,8).
  • Plischke and Bergersen, Equilibrium Statistical Mechanics.
  • Goldenfeld, Lectures on Phase transitions and the Renormalization Group.
  • Sethna, Entropy, Order Parameters, and Complexity.
  • Lecture notes of Daniel Arovas (PDF files available at his website)

Course Outcome: 

1. This course is designed to prepare students for research in equilibrium and time-dependent statistical physics.
2. The topics covered in this course are expected to make the students familiar with the theoretical methods used in studies of equilibrium and time-dependent properties of many-body systems.
3. This course will provide exposure to several non-equilibrium phenomena of current interest.

Course Evaluation:

Mid-term and final examinations, assignments


Credit Score: 4
Guests cannot access this course. Please log in.