The two-dimensional critical Ising model is the critical limit of the Ising model in two dimensions. It is a two-dimensional conformal field theory whose symmetry algebra is the Virasoro algebra with the central charge
.
Correlation functions of the spin and energy operators are described by the
minimal model. While the minimal model has been exactly solved, the solution does not cover other observables such as connectivities of clusters.
The minimal model
The Kac table of the
minimal model is:

This means that the spectrum is generated by three primary states, which correspond to three primary fields or operators:[1]

The decomposition of the spectrum into irreducible representations of the product of the left- and right-moving Virasoro algebras is

where
is the irreducible highest-weight representation of the Virasoro algebra with the conformal dimension
.
In particular, the Ising model is diagonal and unitary.
Characters and partition function
The characters of the three representations of the Virasoro algebra that appear in the spectrum are[1]

where
is the Dedekind eta function, and
are theta functions of the nome
, for example
.
The modular S-matrix, i.e. the matrix
such that
, is[1]

where the fields are ordered as
.
The modular invariant partition function is

Fusion rules and operator product expansions
The fusion rules of the model are

The fusion rules are invariant under the
symmetry
.
The three-point structure constants are

Knowing the fusion rules and three-point structure constants, it is possible to write operator product expansions, for example

where
are the conformal dimensions of the primary fields, and the omitted terms
are contributions of descendent fields.
Correlation functions on the sphere
Any one-, two- and three-point function of primary fields is determined by conformal symmetry up to a multiplicative constant. This constant is set to be one for one- and two-point functions by a choice of field normalizations. The only non-trivial dynamical quantities are the three-point structure constants, which were given above in the context of operator product expansions.


with
.




The three non-trivial four-point functions are of the type
. For a four-point function
,
and
denote the s- and t-channel Virasoro conformal blocks, which respectively correspond to the contributions of
(and its descendents) in the operator product expansion
, and of
(and its descendents) in the operator product expansion
. The cross-ratio is
.
![{\displaystyle \langle \epsilon ^{4}\rangle \ :\ {\mathcal {F}}_{\textbf {1}}^{(s)}={\mathcal {F}}_{\textbf {1}}^{(t)}=\left[\prod _{1\leq i<j\leq 4}z_{ij}^{-{\frac {1}{3}}}\right]{\frac {1-x+x^{2}}{x^{\frac {2}{3}}(1-x)^{\frac {2}{3}}}}\ {\underset {(z_{i})=(x,0,\infty ,1)}{=}}\ {\frac {1}{x(1-x)}}-1}](/media/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/a247afa2b6e109472416237b85bd4df92777ec16)
Four-point functions and conformal blocks.[2]
Including the fusion transformation.
From the representation of the model in terms of Dirac fermions, it is possible to compute correlation functions of any number of spin or energy operators:[1]


These formulas have generalizations to correlation functions on the torus, which involve theta functions.[1]
Relations with other CFTs
Free fermions? Fermionic Ising model
Better distinguish the minimal model from the CFT. Cite Delfino-Viti? Potts model. Mention connectivities. Other observables outside the minimal model: disorder fields, cf BYB.
3pt connectivity obviously not described by minimal model, whose spin operator has vanishing three-point function.
References