I'm writing an article on Gas Cluster Ion Beams, an industrial application of cluster physics. I think it would be helpful to add some discussion of Van der Waal's clusters as compared to metalic clusters. Drswenson 23:07, 11 December 2006 (UTC)Reply

cluster as a more general term, in stat mech.

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I believe that the word "cluster" applies to a much more general concept in stat mech. Although, for physical systems, the objects of study are almost always collections of atoms, this need not be so. Thus, for example, in critical phenomena, e.g. critical opalescence, or e.g. near the Curie temperature, the clusters are atoms. However, insofar as various theoretical systems, such as the Ising model also show similar behaviour; the clustering is more abstract; its not just atoms. So, for the genetic algorithm, the equivalent concept is "building blocks" of Holland's schema theorem, which are not atoms at all, but groupings of genetic material. I think the proper definition is something like "clusters commonly occur wherever the renormalization group can be applied to a problem; clusters are a feature of systems near critical points." Or something like that. linas (talk) 17:09, 3 June 2008 (UTC)Reply