Phase transitions and configuration space topology
Michael Kastner

TL;DR
This paper explores the relationship between topology changes in configuration space and equilibrium phase transitions, revealing that topology changes are necessary for some systems but not all, depending on interaction range and potential confinement.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of how topology changes in configuration space relate to phase transitions, including conditions where they are necessary or not, advancing understanding of the physical mechanisms involved.
Findings
Topology changes are necessary for phase transitions in short-range systems.
Long-range and non-confining systems may undergo phase transitions without topology changes.
Nonanalytic points in thermodynamic functions are linked to topology changes and maximization procedures.
Abstract
Equilibrium phase transitions may be defined as nonanalytic points of thermodynamic functions, e.g., of the canonical free energy. Given a certain physical system, it is of interest to understand which properties of the system account for the presence of a phase transition, and an understanding of these properties may lead to a deeper understanding of the physical phenomenon. One possible approach of this issue, reviewed and discussed in the present paper, is the study of topology changes in configuration space which, remarkably, are found to be related to equilibrium phase transitions in classical statistical mechanical systems. For the study of configuration space topology, one considers the subsets M_v, consisting of all points from configuration space with a potential energy per particle equal to or less than a given v. For finite systems, topology changes of M_v are intimately…
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