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Lecture 41 Statistical Mechanics and Boltzmann factor

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1 Lecture 41 Statistical Mechanics and Boltzmann factor
What is statistical mechanics? Microscopic state and ergodic principle Boltzmann factor Ideal gas in gravitational field Equipartition of energy and heat capacity

2 Statistical mechanics
Statistical mechanics is a science that describes the properties of a thermal system starting from its microscopic structure. It started from study of gases from molecular view. The microscopic description of a system starts with the energy of the system in terms of microscopic variables. 𝐸 π‘Ÿ 𝑖 , 𝑝 𝑖 = 𝑖 𝑝 𝑖 2 2 π‘š 𝑖 + 𝑖𝑗 𝑉 𝑖𝑗

3 Ergodic principle Microscopic states: defined by specifications of coordinates and momenta of all particles in the system. Statistical hypothesis: in a thermal equilibrium with a fixed energy, all microscopic states can be accessed with equal probability. This the fundamental principle (ergodic principle) of statistical mechanics, sometime it is called micro- canonical ensemble.

4 Practical example If we have a fair coin, every time the probability of getting head or tail is the same, Β½ If we throw coin 3 times, we have will 2^3=8 possible results (states): HHH, HHT, HTH, THH, TTH, THT, HTT, TTT Ergodic principle states that all results come with equal probability.

5 Microscopic state For particles with position π‘Ÿ and momentum 𝑝 , the microscopic state is defined by π‘Ÿ and 𝑝 The combined π‘Ÿ and 𝑝 space is called phase space. Any any time, the state of a particle is defined by a point in phase space. The phase space volume element is 𝑑 3 π‘Ÿ 𝑑 3 𝑝

6 Boltzmann factor Most of the time, we are interested in a system in contact with a thermal reservoir with temp 𝑇, in this case, the system can have various energy 𝐸. The probability distribution for a microscopic state with energy E is 𝑷~ 𝒆 βˆ’ 𝑬 π’Œπ‘» This is exponential, also called Boltzmann factor. Taking an assumption, it is called canonical ensemble.

7 Applications: ideal gas
For ideal gas with 𝑁 particles, 𝐸= 𝑖 π‘š 𝑣 𝑖 2 thus we have π‘ƒβˆΌ Ξ  𝑖 𝑒 βˆ’ π‘š 𝑣 𝑖 2 2 π‘˜ 𝐡 𝑇 if we consider the velocity distribution of one particle, one has π‘ƒβˆΌ 𝑒 βˆ’ π‘š 𝑣 π‘˜ 𝐡 𝑇 this is the just the Maxwell-Boltzmann velocity distribution.

8 Ideal gas in gravitational field
Consider now an ideal gas in a gravitational field. The energy is 𝐸= 1 2 π‘š 𝑣 2 +π‘šπ‘”π‘§ The Boltzmann factor becomes, π‘βˆΌ 𝑒 βˆ’ π‘šπ‘”π‘§ π‘˜ 𝐡 𝑇 Thus the density of gas decreases exponentially as 𝑧 gets large. Since the pressure of gas depends on the density, it also decreases exponentially.

9 Gas with more complicated molecules
If we have a gas with molecules, the thermal property of the system is more complicated. For example with a diatomic molecule, the energy consists of three parts, Translational motion Relative motion Rotation. 𝐸= 𝐸 π‘‘π‘Ÿπ‘Žπ‘›π‘ π‘™ + 𝐸 π‘Ÿπ‘œπ‘‘π‘Žπ‘‘π‘–π‘œπ‘› + 𝐸 𝑣𝑖𝑏

10 Equipartition of energy
In thermal equilibrium, energy is shared equally among all of its various forms; for example, the average kinetic energy per degree of freedom in the translational motion of a molecule should equal that of its rotational motions Any degree of freedom (such as a component of the position or velocity of a particle) has an average energy of π‘˜ 𝐡 𝑇

11 Denote 𝑑: number of freedom degree for translation π‘Ÿ: number of freedom degree for rotation 𝑠: number of freedom degree for vibration The internal energy π‘ˆ π‘šπ‘œπ‘™ = π‘Ÿ+𝑑+2𝑠 2 𝑁 𝐴 π‘˜ 𝐡 𝑇= π‘Ÿ+𝑑+2𝑠 2 𝑅𝑇 For each vibration, there should be a corresponding potential. Therefore one more 𝑠 is added. For constant volume process, the heat capacity is 𝐢 𝑉 π‘šπ‘œπ‘™ = 𝑑 π‘ˆ π‘šπ‘œπ‘™ 𝑑𝑇 = π‘Ÿ+𝑑+2𝑠 2 𝑅

12 Monatomic and diatomic gases
Monatomic gases have only translational motion, 3 degrees of freedom π‘ˆ π‘šπ‘œπ‘™ = 3 2 𝑁 𝐴 π‘˜ 𝐡 𝑇= 3 2 𝑅𝑇 Diatomic gases, 3 degrees of freedom for translational motion the center of mass, 2 degrees of freedom for rotation, 1 degree of freedom for oscillation and 1 degree of freedom for potential π‘ˆ π‘šπ‘œπ‘™ = 7 2 𝑁 𝐴 π‘˜ 𝐡 𝑇= 7 2 𝑅𝑇


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