Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 January 2010
Classical statistical mechanics tries to derive the macroscopic properties of matter starting from the mechanical laws that rule the behaviour of single particles. To describe equilibrium states, only observables accounting for correlations among states are considered, and only systems consisting of a large number of particles are taken into account. The observables are described by continuous functions on phase space, and the states are represented by linear assignments of a number to each observable. Within the framework of the canonical ensemble, one deals with mechanical systems in thermal equilibrium with a thermal reservoir, and the equilibrium state is reached as a result of the interaction with the external world. The external world may be really external, or equally well, the unrecognized internal degrees of freedom, like in the calculation of viscosity or thermal conductivity. If really only the external world is the cause we may expect some surface dependence while an internal unrecognized degree of freedom would have a volume effect, unless the interactions are long range. The microcanonical ensemble is instead introduced to study isolated mechanical systems, and the equilibrium is viewed as a temporal average, rather than as a limit. Attention is then focused on partition functions, the theorem of equipartition of energy and an elementary theory of specific heats.
In the second part, the Planck derivation of the law of black-body radiation is analysed, presenting in chronological order the Kirchhoff theorem, the Stefan law, the Wien displacement law, the Rayleigh–Jeans formula and the Planck hypothesis. Further topics discussed are the Einstein and Debye quantum models for specific heats of solids. These topics prepare the ground for the introduction of quantum statistical mechanics.
The third part is, in fact, devoted to the analysis of identical particles in quantum mechanics.
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