Scaling, Fractal Dynamics and Critical Exponents: Application in a non-integer dimensional Ising model
Henrique A. de Lima, Ismael S. S. Carrasco, Marcio Santos, Fernando A. Oliveira

TL;DR
This paper introduces a fractional calculus approach to analyze phase transitions in non-integer dimensional Ising models, accurately deriving critical exponents and confirming scaling laws beyond traditional Euclidean dimensions.
Contribution
It develops a fractional differential framework to derive correlation functions and critical exponents in non-integer dimensions, extending classical theories.
Findings
Exact Fisher exponent η derived using fractional calculus.
Validation of Rushbrooke scaling law in non-integer dimensions.
Demonstration that fractal analysis is essential at criticality.
Abstract
Moving beyond simple associations, researchers need tools to quantify how variables influence each other in space and time. Correlation functions provide a mathematical framework for characterizing these essential dependencies, revealing insights into causality, structure, and hidden patterns within complex systems. In physical systems with many degrees of freedom, such as gases, liquids, and solids, a statistical analysis of these correlations is essential. For a field that depends on spatial position and time , it is often necessary to understand the correlation with itself at another position and time . This specific function is called the autocorrelation function. In this context, the autocorrelation function for order--parameter fluctuations, introduced by Fisher, provides an important mathematical framework for understanding the…
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