Consider a 2D square array of classical spins which may only take two positions: +1 and −1, at a certain temperature T, interacting through the
Ising classical
Hamiltonian: : H= -J \sum_{[i,j]} S_i\cdot S_j where the sum is extended over the pairs of nearest neighbours and J is a coupling constant, which we will consider to be fixed. There is a certain temperature, called the
Curie temperature or
critical temperature, T_c below which the system presents
ferromagnetic long range order. Above it, it is
paramagnetic and is apparently disordered. At temperature zero, the system may only take one global sign, either +1 or -1. At higher temperatures, but below T_c, the state is still globally magnetized, but clusters of the opposite sign appear. As the temperature increases, these clusters start to contain smaller clusters themselves, in a typical Russian dolls picture. Their typical size, called the
correlation length, \xi grows with temperature until it diverges at T_c. This means that the whole system is such a cluster, and there is no global magnetization. Above that temperature, the system is globally disordered, but with ordered clusters within it, whose size is again called
correlation length, but it is now decreasing with temperature. At infinite temperature, it is again zero, with the system fully disordered. ==Divergences at the critical point==