You are currently viewing a new version of our website. To view the old version click .
Entropy
  • This is an early access version, the complete PDF, HTML, and XML versions will be available soon.
  • Review
  • Open Access

4 December 2025

Twist Fields in Many-Body Physics

Department of Mathematics, King’s College London, Strand, London WC2R 2LS, UK
This article belongs to the Special Issue Entanglement Entropy in Quantum Field Theory

Abstract

The notion of twist fields has played a fundamental role in many-body physics. It is used to construct the so-called disorder parameter for the study of phase transitions in the classical Ising model of statistical mechanics, it is involved in the Jordan–Wigner transformation in quantum chains and bosonisation in quantum field theory, and it is related to measures of entanglement in many-body quantum systems. I provide a pedagogical introduction to the notion of twist field and the concepts at its roots, and review some of its applications, focussing on the 1 + 1 dimension. This includes locality and extensivity, internal symmetries, semi-locality, the standard exponential form and HEGT fields, path-integral defects and Riemann surfaces, topological invariance, and twist families. Additional topics touched upon include renormalisation and form factors in relativistic quantum field theory, tau functions of integrable PDEs, thermodynamic and hydrodynamic principles, and branch-point twist fields for entanglement entropy. One-dimensional quantum systems such as chains (e.g., quantum Heisenberg model) and field theory (e.g., quantum sine-Gordon model) are the main focus, but I also explain how the notion applies to equilibrium statistical mechanics (e.g., classical Ising lattice model), and how some aspects can be adapted to one-dimensional classical dynamical systems (e.g., classical Toda chain).

Article Metrics

Citations

Article Access Statistics

Multiple requests from the same IP address are counted as one view.