Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2014
The goal of this advanced graduate-level textbook is to provide a description of the field-theoretic renormalization group approach for the study of time-dependent phenomena in systems either close to a critical point, or displaying generic scale invariance. Its general aim is a unifying treatment of classical near-equilibrium, as well as quantum and non-equilibrium systems, providing the reader with a thorough grasp of the fundamental principles and physical ideas underlying the subject.
Scaling ideas and the renormalization group philosophy and its various mathematical formulations were developed in the 1960s and early 1970s. In the realm of statistical physics, they led to a profound understanding of critical singularities near continuous phase transitions in thermal equilibrium. Beginning in the late 1960s, these concepts were subsequently generalized and applied to dynamic critical phenomena. By the mid-1980s, when I began my research career, critical dynamics had become a mature but still exciting field with many novel applications. Specifically, extensions to quantum critical points and to systems either driven or initialized far away from thermal equilibrium opened fertile new areas for in-depth analytical and numerical investigations.
By now there exists a fair sample of excellent textbooks that provide profound expositions of the renormalization group method for static critical phenomena, adequately introducing statistical field theory as the basic tool, and properly connecting it with its parent, quantum field theory. However, novice researchers who wish to familiarize themselves with the basic techniques and results in the study of dynamic critical phenomena still must resort largely to the original literature, supplemented with a number of very good review articles.
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