Questions tagged [statistical-mechanics]

The study of large, complicated systems employing statistics and probability theory to extract average properties and to provide a connection between mechanics and thermodynamics.

Statistical mechanics (SM) is a branch of physics that aims to predict the properties of large, complicated systems by employing the mathematical framework of statistics and probability theory.

For typical microscopic systems, the SM approach is the only one possible. Indeed, a typical macroscopic body contains several molecules of the order of Avogadro's number, $N_A \approx 6 \cdot 10^{23}$. If we wanted to predict the trajectory of each particle of a system of $N$ particles exactly, we would need to solve $3 \cdot N \approx 10^{24}$ coupled equations, which is infeasible even for modern computers. Moreover, even if a computer was able to solve such a large number of equations in a short time, we would need to write the $6 \cdot N \approx 10^{24}$ initial conditions, which is definitely infeasible. Therefore, we renounce a complete knowledge of the system and try to get an average knowledge by applying the tools of statistics and probability theory.

SM was pioneered in the late 1800s / early 1900s by the works of Maxwell, Boltzmann, and Gibbs.

Maxwell formulated the first-ever statistical law in physics, the Maxwell distribution of molecular velocities. Boltzmann developed Maxwell's ideas further, investigating the kinetics of gases, the link between thermodynamics and mechanics, and the origins of macroscopic irreversibility. Gibbs, who coined the term "statistical mechanics", gave a rigorous and coherent formulation of SM, introducing concepts such as the phase space and the statistical ensemble.

6717 questions
29
votes
11 answers

Why is the fundamental postulate of statistical mechanics true?

As I'm sure folks here know, the principle of equal a priori probabilities, sometimes called the fundamental postulate of statistical mechanics, states the following: For an isolated system with an exactly known energy and exactly known…
20
votes
1 answer

How did Kelvin make this fascinating calculation?

I was just reading Lord Kelvin's "The Sorting Demon Of Maxwell" where I found this quote concerning what Maxwell's Demon can do: (He) can direct the energy of the moving molecules of a basin of water to throw the water up to a height and leave it…
tom
  • 1,423
18
votes
3 answers

Dispensing with the "a priori equal probability" postulate

I find the "a priori equal probability postulate" in statistical mechanics terribly frustrating. I look at two different states of a system, and they look very different. The particles are moving in different ways! I like to imagine that if you…
tom
  • 1,423
15
votes
3 answers

Why is a hard sphere gas correlated?

In stat mech we calculated the radial distribution function (a.k.a. pair correlation function) for a classical gas by using perturbation theory for the BBGKY hierarchy. (I could post more details of the calculation if you want, but it is a rather…
Michael
  • 16,512
  • 2
  • 49
  • 69
13
votes
2 answers

How to derive Fermi-Dirac and Bose-Einstein distribution using canonical ensemble?

My textbook says that microcanonical ensemble, canonical ensemble and grand canonical ensemble are essentially equivalent under thermodynamic limit. It also derives Fermi-Dirac and Bose-Einstein distribution from grand canonical ensemble. My…
Siyuan Ren
  • 4,932
13
votes
1 answer

Why does Planck's constant appear in classical statistical mechanics

Why does Planck's constant appear in classical statistical mechanics. I gather a constant appears in because we would like to count classical states in phase space and so therefore we have to separate phase space into "boxes" such that $$\delta…
Trajan
  • 855
12
votes
1 answer

Largest theoretically possible specific heat capacity?

What substance will have the largest specific heat capacity integrated from T=0 to, say, room temperature? In other words, given a finite amount of mass, what object or collection of objects has the largest number of degrees of freedom that can be…
user1552
12
votes
1 answer

What is the field of mathematics that describes the transition into statistical mechanics?

There are interesting changes that occur in a sample of interacting objects, such as gas particles, as you approach a statistically significant sample. The position or velocity of any given particle no longer matters as much as the collective…
LBM
  • 189
  • 5
11
votes
4 answers

What constitutes a microstate?

A microstate is something like a specific configuration of particles in a system. However, does this consist only of the energies of the specific particles? Or are the velocities and positions also important? Also, in quantum mechanics particles can…
Riemann
  • 1,430
11
votes
2 answers

(Canonical) Partition function - what assumption is at work here?

The canonical partition function is defined as $$Z=\sum_{s}e^{-\beta E_s}$$ with the sum being over all states of the system. The way I saw this derived was by assuming that for each state, the probability of the system occupying that state is…
Spine Feast
  • 2,805
11
votes
2 answers

The concept of ensemble

I have been puzzled with the definition of ensemble in Statistical Mechanics. Different sources define it in different ways, e.g., Introduction To Statistical Physics (Huang), Thermodynamics and Statisitical Mechanics (Greiner): ensemble is a set…
aprendiz
  • 372
10
votes
2 answers

What does the chromatic polynomial have to do with the Potts model?

Wikipedia writes: In statistical mechanics, the Potts model, a generalization of the Ising model, is a model of interacting spins on a crystalline lattice. From combinatorics conferences and seminars, I know that the Potts model has…
10
votes
1 answer

For which systems is the equipartition theorem valid?

Under what conditions does a system with many degrees of freedom satisfy the equipartition theorem?
Johannes
  • 19,015
9
votes
2 answers

Derivation of Boltzmann distribution - two questions

I understand that the usual way of deriving the Boltzmann distribution involves considering a small system of energy $\epsilon$ embedded in a much larger heat bath of energy $E - \epsilon$ and the total system energy is $E$. Given that the bath has…
user1936752
  • 2,492
  • 3
  • 17
  • 29
8
votes
4 answers

What is the physical meaning of ensemble average?

I understand, I think, abstractly what an ensemble average is. However, I've always been confused by the physical meaning of it. More specifically, is it physically possible to obtain an ensemble average in reality? Since a system can only have one…
1
2 3
21 22