Abstract:
On the basis of the approximation which consists of replacing the
operator of the square of the fluctuation components of the local
field by its mean value
$(\Delta\sigma_f^\alpha)^2\simeq\langle(\Delta\sigma_f^\alpha)^2\rangle$, $\Delta\sigma_f^\alpha=\sigma_f^\alpha-\langle\sigma_f^\alpha\rangle$ (called
henceforth the static fluctuation approximation), a systematic
microscopic scheme is proposed for calculating the correlation
functions and the thermodynamic characteristics associated with
them for a large class of magnetic systems. The basic threedimensional
ferromagnetic models (Ising, Heisenberg) are studied
fairly fully and from a common point of view in zero magnetic
field for temperatures $T\geqslant T_c$. The critical temperatures of the
models are determined, and the specific heat and binary correlation
functions of the short-range order are calculated for the three
basic types of cubic lattice with short-range interaction. Comparison
of the obtained results with other methods of calculating
the models indicates a good accuracy of the approximation, which
may provide a reliable basis for the calculation of more complicated
systems. Ways of testing experimentally the fluctuation approximation
in the paramagnetic region of temperatures are pointed out.