The critical exponents and are defined in terms of the behaviour of the order parameters and response functions near the critical point as follows
- , for
- , for
-
-
where
- measures the temperature relative to the critical point.
Near the critical point, Widom's scaling relation reads
- .
where has an expansion
- ,
with
being Wegner's exponent governing the approach to scaling.
The scaling hypothesis is that near the critical point, the free energy , in dimensions, can be written as the sum of a slowly varying regular part and a singular part , with the singular part being a scaling function, i.e., a homogeneous function, so that
-
Then taking the partial derivative with respect to H and the form of M(t,H) gives
-
Setting and in the preceding equation yields
- for
Comparing this with the definition of yields its value,
-
Similarly, putting and into the scaling relation for M yields
-
Hence
-
Applying the expression for the isothermal susceptibility in terms of M to the scaling relation yields
-
Setting H=0 and for (resp. for ) yields
-
Similarly for the expression for specific heat in terms of M to the scaling relation yields
-
Taking H=0 and for (or for yields
-
As a consequence of Widom scaling, not all critical exponents are independent but they can be parameterized by two numbers with the relations expressed as
-
-
The relations are experimentally well verified for magnetic systems and fluids.
- ^ Kerson Huang, Statistical Mechanics. John Wiley and Sons, 1987