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Thermodynamics has benefited from nearly 100 years of parallel development with quantum mechanics. As a result, thermal physics has been considerably enriched in concepts, technique and purpose, and now has a dominant role in the developments of physics, chemistry and biology. This unique book explores the meaning and application of these developments using quantum theory as the starting point. The book links thermal physics and quantum mechanics in a natural way. Concepts are combined with interesting examples, and entire chapters are dedicated to applying the principles to familiar, practical and unusual situations. Together with end-of-chapter exercises, this book gives advanced undergraduate and graduate students a modern perception and appreciation for this remarkable subject.
Statistical physics has its origins in attempts to describe the thermal properties of matter in terms of its constituent particles, and has played a fundamental role in the development of quantum mechanics. Based on lectures taught by Professor Kardar at MIT, this textbook introduces the central concepts and tools of statistical physics. It contains a chapter on probability and related issues such as the central limit theorem and information theory, and covers interacting particles, with an extensive description of the van der Waals equation and its derivation by mean field approximation. It also contains an integrated set of problems, with solutions to selected problems at the end of the book and a complete set of solutions is available to lecturers on a password protected website at www.cambridge.org/9780521873420. A companion volume, Statistical Physics of Fields, discusses non-mean field aspects of scaling and critical phenomena, through the perspective of renormalization group.
This introductory textbook for standard undergraduate courses in thermodynamics has been completely rewritten to explore a greater number of topics, more clearly and concisely. Starting with an overview of important quantum behaviours, the book teaches students how to calculate probabilities in order to provide a firm foundation for later chapters. It introduces the ideas of classical thermodynamics and explores them both in general and as they are applied to specific processes and interactions. The remainder of the book deals with statistical mechanics. Each topic ends with a boxed summary of ideas and results, and every chapter contains numerous homework problems, covering a broad range of difficulties. Answers are given to odd-numbered problems, and solutions to even-numbered problems are available to instructors at www.cambridge.org/9781107694927.
This book introduces the reader to statistical reasoning and its use in physics. It is based on a course taught to non-science majors at Cornell, and differs from other treatments by its wide-ranging use of quantitative methods, which are built up in a constructive way and assume only that the reader can add, subtract, multiply and divide with confidence. The author begins with a self-contained introduction to the everyday uses of probability, including the quantitative assessment of statistical information. Following a chapter on useful mathematical concepts, he develops the basic ideas of mechanical motion, the molecular theory of gases, entropy as a measure of molecular agitation, limitations on the conversion of heat to work, the physics of the direction of time, chaos, and the role of probability in quantum mechanics. To aid self-instruction, there are solved problems at the end of each chapter.
While many scientists are familiar with fractals, fewer are familiar with scale-invariance and universality which underlie the ubiquity of their shapes. These properties may emerge from the collective behaviour of simple fundamental constituents, and are studied using statistical field theories. Initial chapters connect the particulate perspective developed in the companion volume, to the coarse grained statistical fields studied here. Based on lectures taught by Professor Kardar at MIT, this textbook demonstrates how such theories are formulated and studied. Perturbation theory, exact solutions, renormalization groups, and other tools are employed to demonstrate the emergence of scale invariance and universality, and the non-equilibrium dynamics of interfaces and directed paths in random media are discussed. Ideal for advanced graduate courses in statistical physics, it contains an integrated set of problems, with solutions to selected problems at the end of the book and a complete set available to lecturers at www.cambridge.org/9780521873413.
In the preface to his book Statistical Mechanics Made Simple Professor Daniel Mattis writes:
My own experience in thermodynamics and statistical mechanics, a half century ago at M.I.T., consisted of a single semester of Sears, skillfully taught by the man himself. But it was a subject that seemed as distant from “real” physics as did poetry or French literature.
This frank but discouraging admission suggests that thermodynamics may not be a course eagerly anticipated by many students – not even physics, chemistry or engineering majors – and at completion I would suppose that few are likely to claim it was an especially inspiring experience. With such open aversion, the often disappointing performance on GRE questions covering the subject should not be a surprise. As a teacher of the subject I have often conjectured on reasons for this lack of enthusiasm.
Apart from its subtlety and perceived difficulty, which are probably immutable, I venture to guess that one problem might be that most curricula resemble the thermodynamics of nearly a century ago.
Another might be that, unlike other areas of physics with their epigrammatic equations – Newton's, Maxwell's or Schrödinger's, which provide accessibility and direction – thermal physics seems to lack a comparable unifying principle. Students may therefore fail to see conceptual or methodological coherence and experience confusion instead.
With those assumptions I propose in this book alternatives which try to address the disappointing experience of Professor Mattis and undoubtedly others.
Thermodynamics, the set of rules and constraints governing interconversion and dissipation of energy in macroscopic systems, can be regarded as having begun with Carnot's (1824) pioneering paper on heat-engine efficiency.
The atomistic nature of matter as conceptualized by the Greeks had, by the 19th century, been raised by scientists to a high probability. But it was Planck's law of radiation that yielded the first exact determination of the absolute size of atoms. More than that, he convincingly showed that in addition to the atomistic structure of matter there is a kind of atomistic structure to energy, governed by the universal constant h.
This discovery has almost completely dominated the development of physics in the 20th century. Without this discovery a workable theory of molecules and atoms and the energy processes that govern their transformations would not have been possible. It has, moreover, shaken the whole framework of classical mechanics and electrodynamics and set science the fresh task of finding a new conceptual basis for all of physics. Despite partial success, the problem is still far from solved.
Albert Einstein, “Max Planck memorial service” (1948). Original image, Einstein Archives Online, Jerusalem (trans. A. Wasserman)
The beginning
Thermodynamics has exceeded the scope and applicability of its utile origins in the industrial revolution to a far greater extent than other subjects of physics' classical era, such as mechanics and electromagnetism. Unquestionably this results from over a century of synergistic development with quantum mechanics, to which it has given and from which it has gained clarification, enhancement and relevance, earning for it a vital role in the modern development of physics as well as chemistry, biology, engineering, and even aspects of philosophy.
Why is it that particles with half-integer spin are Fermi particles whereas particles with integer spin are Bose particles? An explanation has been worked out by Pauli from complicated arguments from quantum field theory and relativity. He has shown that the two must necessarily go together … but we have not been able to reproduce his arguments on an elementary level. This probably means we do not have a complete understanding of the fundamental principle involved…
R. P. Feynman, R.B. Leighton and M. Sands, Feynman Lectures on Physics, Volume 3, Chapter 4, Section 1, Addison-Wesley, Reading, MA (1963)
Introduction
Particles with half-integer angular momentum obey the Pauli exclusion principle (PEP) – a restriction that a non-degenerate single-particle quantum state can have occupation number of only 0 or 1. This restriction was announced by W. Pauli in 1924 for which, in 1945, he received the Nobel Prize in Physics. Soon after Pauli, the exclusion principle was generalized by P. Dirac and E. Fermi who – independently – integrated it into quantum mechanics. As a consequence half-integer spin particles are called Fermi–Dirac particles or fermions. PEP applies to electrons, protons, neutrons, neutrinos, quarks – and their antiparticles – as well as composite fermions such as He3 atoms. Thermodynamic properties of metals and semiconductors are largely determined by electron (fermion) behavior.
From a certain temperature on, the molecules “condense” without attractive forces; that is, they accumulate at zero velocity. The theory is pretty, but is there also some truth to it?
Albert Einstein, Letter to Ehrenfest (Dec. 1924). Abraham Pais, Subtle Is the Lord: The Science and the Life of Albert Einstein, Oxford University Press, New York (1982)
Introduction
For over 50 years the low-temperature liquid state of uncharged, spinless He4 was the only system in which a Bose–Einstein (BE) condensation was considered experimentally realized. In that case, cold (<2.19K) liquid He4 passes into an extraordinary phase of matter called a superfluid, in which the liquid's viscosity and entropy become zero.
With advances in atomic cooling (to ≈ 10–9 K) the number of Bose systems which demonstrably pass into a condensate has considerably increased. These include several isotopes of alkali gas atoms as well as fermionic atoms that pair into integerspin (boson) composites.
Although an ideal Bose gas does exhibit a low-temperature critical instability, the ideal BE gas theory is not, on its own, able to describe the BE condensate wave state. In order for a theory of bosons to account for a condensate wave state, interactions between the bosons must be included. Nevertheless, considerable interesting physics is contained in the ideal Bose gas model.