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{{Merge|Statistical physics|date=December 2007}}
{{redirect|Khotan|the actor known simply as Khotan|Khotan Fernández}}
{{Nofootnotes|date=November 2007}}
{{otheruses|Statistical thermodynamics}}
{{Statistical mechanics}}


'''Statistical mechanics''' is the application of [[probability theory]], which includes [[Mathematics|mathematical]] tools for dealing with large populations, to the field of [[mechanics]], which is concerned with the motion of particles or objects when subjected to a force.
[[Image:Hindutagh-pass-aksai-chin-center2-1873.jpg|thumb|right|200px|Map of [[Central Asia]] (1878) showing Khotan (near top right corner) and the Sanju, [[Hindu-tagh]], and Ilchi passes through the [[Kunlun Mountains]] to [[Leh]] in [[Ladakh]]. The previous border of the [[British Raj|British Indian Empire]] is shown in the two-toned purple and pink band. The mountain passes are shown in bright red. Double-click for details.]]
Statistical mechanics, sometimes called [[statistical physics]],
can be viewed as a subfield of
[[physics]]
and
[[chemistry]]. Pioneers in establishing the field were [[Ludwig Boltzmann]] and [[Josiah Willard Gibbs]].


It provides a framework for relating the microscopic properties of individual atoms and molecules to the macroscopic or bulk properties of materials that can be observed in everyday life, therefore explaining [[thermodynamics]] as a natural result of statistics and mechanics (classical and quantum) at the microscopic level. In particular, it can be used to calculate the thermodynamic properties of bulk materials from the spectroscopic data of individual molecules.
The [[oasis]] town of '''Hotan''' (Persian:ختن)({{lang-ug3|خوتەن|Xoten|Hotǝn}}, {{zh-cp|c=和田 |p=Hétián}}, formerly: {{zh-stp|s=和阗 |t=和闐 |p=Hétián}}; also spelled ''Khotan'').<ref>The official spelling is "Hotan" according to ''Zhōngguó dìmínglù'' 中国地名录 (Beijing, ''Zhōngguó dìtú chūbǎnshè'' 中国地图出版社 1997); ISBN 7-5031-1718-4; p. 312.</ref> It was previously known in Chinese as 于窴 pinyin: Yutian.


This ability to make macroscopic predictions based on microscopic properties is the main advantage of statistical mechanics over [[thermodynamics]]. Both theories are governed by the second law of thermodynamics through the medium of [[entropy]]. However, [[entropy]] in [[thermodynamics]] can only be known empirically, whereas in statistical mechanics, it is a function of the distribution of the system on its micro-states.
Hotan is the capital of [[Hotan Prefecture]], [[Xinjiang]], [[China]]. With a population of 114,000 (2006), Hotan lies in the [[Tarim Basin]], just north of the [[Kunlun Mountains]], which are crossed by the Sanju, [[Hindu-tagh]], and Ilchi passes.


== Fundamental postulate ==
The town, located southeast of [[Yarkent County|Yarkand]] and populated almost exclusively by [[Uyghur people|Uyghurs]], is a minor agricultural center. An important station on the southern branch of the historic [[Silk Road]], Hotan has always depended on two strong rivers - the [[Karakash River]] and the [[Yurungkash River]] - to provide the water needed to survive on the southwestern edge of the vast [[Taklamakan Desert]]. The Yurungkash still provides water and irrigation for the town and oasis.<ref>[[Marc Aurel Stein]]. (1907) ''Ancient Khotan: Detailed Report of Archaeological Explorations in Eastern Turkestan.'' Oxford. Pages 123-126.</ref><ref>Bonavia, Judy. ''The Silk Road: Xi'an to Kashgar.'' Revised by Christopher Baumer (2004), pp. 306-319. Odyssey Publications. ISBN 962-217-741-7.</ref>


The fundamental postulate in statistical mechanics (also known as the ''equal a priori probability postulate'') is the following:
==History==
{{details|Kingdom of Khotan}}


:''Given an isolated system in equilibrium, it is found with equal probability in each of its accessible [[microstate (statistical mechanics)|microstate]]s.''
The oasis of Hotan is strategically located at the junction of the southern (and most ancient) branch of the famous “[[Silk Road|Silk Route]]” joining [[China]] and the West with one of the main routes from [[India]] and [[Tibet]] to [[Central Asia]] and distant China. It provided a convenient meeting place where not only goods, but technologies, philosophies, and religions were transmitted from one culture to another.


This postulate is a fundamental assumption in statistical mechanics - it states that a system in equilibrium does not have any preference for any of its available microstates. Given Ω microstates at a particular energy, the probability of finding the system in a particular microstate is ''p'' = 1/Ω.
At Sampul, to the east of the city of Hotan, there is an extensive series of cemeteries scattered over an area about a kilometre wide and 23 km long. The excavated sites range from about 300 BCE - 100 CE. The excavated graves have produced a number of fabrics of felt, wool, silk and cotton and even a fine bit of tapestry showing the face of Caucasoid man which was made of threads of 24 shades of colour. The tapestry had been cut up and fashioned into trousers worn by one of the deceased! Anthropological studies 56 individuals studied show a primarily Caucasoid population "similar to the Saka burials of the southern Pamirs".<ref>Mallory, J. P. and Mair, Victor H. 2000. ''The Tarim Mummies: Ancient China and the Mystery of the Earliest Peoples from the West'', pp. 132, 155-156. Thames & Hudson. London. ISBN 0-500-05101-1.</ref><ref>Bonavia, Judy. ''The Silk Road: Xi'an to Kashgar.'' Revised by Christopher Baumer (2004), p. 317. Odyssey Publications. ISBN 962-217-741-7.</ref>
[[Image:Khotan-melikawat-ruinas-d05.jpg|thumb|left|Khotan Melikawat ruins]]
There is a relative abundance of information on Hotan readily available for study. The main historical sources are to be found in the Chinese histories (particularly detailed during the [[Han Dynasty|Han]] and early [[Tang Dynasty|Tang]] dynasties), the accounts of several Chinese pilgrim monks, a few Buddhist histories of Hotan that have survived in [[Tibetan language|Tibetan]], and a large number of documents in [[Khotanese]] and other languages discovered, for the most part, early this century at various sites in the Tarim Basin and from the hidden library at the “[[Mogao Caves|Caves of the Thousand Buddhas]]” near [[Dunhuang]].


This postulate is necessary because it allows one to conclude that for a system at equilibrium, the thermodynamic state (macrostate) which could result from the largest number of microstates is also the most probable macrostate of the system.
The ancient [[Kingdom of Khotan]] was one of the earliest [[Buddhist]] states in the world and a cultural bridge across which Buddhist culture and learning were transmitted from India to China.<ref>[http://www.britannica.com/ebc/article-9040640]</ref>


The postulate is justified in part, for classical systems, by [[Liouville's theorem (Hamiltonian)]], which shows that if the distribution of system points through accessible [[phase space]] is uniform at some time, it remains so at later times.
By 1006, Khotan was held by the Muslim Yūsuf Qadr Khān, a brother or cousin of the Muslim ruler of Kāshgar and Balāsāghūn. Between 1006 and 1165, after it fell to the Kara Kitai, it was part of the [[Kara-Khanid Khanate]] and became, in time, a Muslim state. The town suffered severely during the [[Dungan revolt]] against the [[Qing Dynasty]] in 1864-1875, and again a few years later when [[Yaqub Beg]] of [[Kashgar]] made himself master of East Turkestan.<ref>Stein, Aurel M. 1907. ''Ancient Khotan: Detailed report of archaeological explorations in Chinese Turkestan'', 2 vols., p. 180. Clarendon Press. Oxford. [http://dsr.nii.ac.jp/toyobunko/]</ref><ref>Bonavia, Judy. ''The Silk Road: Xi'an to Kashgar.'' Revised by Christopher Baumer (2004), p. 309. Odyssey Publications. ISBN 962-217-741-7.</ref>


Similar justification for a discrete system is provided by the mechanism of [[detailed balance]].
==Products==
'''Nephrite Jade'''


This allows for the definition of the ''information function'' (in the context of [[information theory]]):...
Khotan is famous for its high-quality [[nephrite]] jade, which comes in a variety of colurs. Chinese historical sources indicate that Hotan was the main source of the [[nephrite]] [[jade]] used in ancient China. For several hundred years, until they were defeated by the [[Xiongnu]] in 176 BCE, the trade of Hotanese jade into China was controlled by the nomadic [[Yuezhi]]. The Chinese still refer to the Yurungkash as the [[White Jade River]], alluding to the white [[jade]] recovered from its [[alluvial]] deposits. Most of the jade is now gone, with only a few kilos of good quality jade found yearly. Some is still mined in the [[Kunlun Mountain]]s to the south in the summer,<ref>Bonavia, Judy. ''The Silk Road: Xi'an to Kashgar.'' Revised by Christopher Baumer (2004), pp. 307-308. Odyssey Publications. ISBN 962-217-741-7.</ref> but it is generally of poorer quality than that found in the rivers.<ref>[[Marc Aurel Stein]]. (1907) ''Ancient Khotan: Detailed Report of Archaeological Explorations in Eastern Turkestan.'' Oxford. Pages 132-133.</ref><ref>Laufer, Berthold. ''Jade: A Study in Chinese Archaeology & Religion''. (1912) Reprint: Dover Publications, New York, N.Y. (1974), pp. 24, 26, 291-293, 324. ISBN 0-486-23123-2.</ref>
'''Fabrics and carpets'''


:<math>
Chinese-Khotanese relations were so close that the oasis emerged as one of the earliest centres of [[silk]] manufacture outside China. There are good reasons to believe that the silk-producing industry flourished in Hotan as early as the fifth century.<ref>Whitfield, Susan. ''The Silk Road: Trade, Travel, War and Faith''. Serindia Publications Inc., 2004. ISBN 1932476121. Page 47.</ref> According to one story, a Chinese princess given in marriage to a Khotan prince brought to the oasis the secret of silk-manufacture, "hiding silkworms in her hair as part of her dowry", probably in the first half of the 1st century CE.<ref>Hill, John E. 2003. "Annotated Translation of the Chapter on the Western Regions according to the ''Hou Hanshu''." 2nd Draft Edition. [http://depts.washington.edu/silkroad/texts/hhshu/hou_han_shu.html]</ref><ref>Sarah Underhill Wisseman, Wendell S. Williams. ''Ancient Technologies and Archaeological Materials ''. Routledge, 1994. ISBN 288124632X. Page 131.</ref> It was from Khotan that the eggs of silkworms were smuggled to [[Persia]], reaching [[Justinian]]'s [[Constantinople]] in 551 AD.<ref>" From Khotan, silk culture is believed to have passed by way of [[Kashmir]] to India
I = - \sum_i \rho_i \ln\rho_i = \langle \ln \rho \rangle.
and then westwards into central Asia and Persia". Quoted from Chambers's Encyclopaedia, Oxford University Press, 1950, article "Silk".</ref> [[Image:Khotan-mezquita-d03.jpg|thumbnail|right|200px|A mosque in Hotan]]
</math>


When all rhos are equal, I is minimal, which reflects the fact that we have minimal information about the system. When our information is maximal, i.e. one rho is equal to one and the rest to zero (we know what state the system is in), the function is maximal.
Khotanese carpets, were mentioned by [[Xuanzang]], who visited the oasis in [[644]] CE: "The country produces woolen carpets and fine felt, and the people are skillful in spinning and weaving silk."<ref>''The Great Tang Dynasty Record of the Western Regions''. Xuanzang. Translated by Li Rongxi. Numata Center for Buddhist Translation and Research. (1996), p. 375. ISBN 1-886439-02-8.</ref> In his Biography it is stated: "It produced carpets and fine felt, and the felt-makers also spun coarse and fine silk." <ref>''A Biography of the Tripiṭaka Master of the great Ci'en Monastery of the Great Tang Dynasty''. Śramaṇa Huili and Shi Yancong. Translated by Li Rongxi. Numata Center for Buddhist Translation and Research. (1995), p. 163. ISBN 1-886439-00-1.</ref>
''[Comments: It should be "When all rhos are equal, I is maximal...", please have a check]
''
This "information function" is the same as the '''reduced entropic function''' in thermodynamics.


== Microcanonical ensemble ==
Not only pile carpets were produced in ancient times, but also [[kilim]]s:
{{main|Microcanonical ensemble}}
In microcanonical ensemble N, V and E are fixed. Since the [[second law of thermodynamics]] applies to [[isolated]] systems, the first case investigated will correspond to this case. The ''Microcanonical ensemble'' describes an [[isolated]] system.


The [[entropy]] of such a system can only increase, so that the maximum of its [[entropy]] corresponds to an [[thermodynamic equilibrium|equilibrium]] state for the system.
:"As kilims are much less durable than rugs that have a pile to protect the warp and weft, it is not surprising that few of great age remain. The oldest piece of which we have any knowledge is a fragment obtained by M. A. [[Stein]], the archaeological explorer, from the ruins near Khotan, in Eastern Turkestan, of an ancient settlement, which was buried by sand drifts about the fourth or fifth century ''anno domini''. The weave is almost identical with that of modern kilims, and has about fourteen threads of warp and sixteen threads of weft to the inch. The pattern consists of narrow stripes of blue, green, brownish yellow, and red, containing very small geometric designs. With this one exception, so peculiarly preserved, there are probably very few over a century old."<ref>Hawley, Walter A. ''Oriental Rugs Antique & Modern''. (1913). Reprint (1970): Dover Publications, New York, N.Y., p. 278.</ref>


Because an [[isolated system]] keeps a constant energy, the total [[energy]] of the system does not fluctuate. Thus, the system can access only those of its micro-states that correspond to a given value ''E'' of the energy. The [[internal energy]] of the system is then strictly equal to its [[energy]].
Khotanese pile carpets are still highly prized and form an important export.<ref>Bennett, Ian. Rugs & Carpets of the World. (1978). Ferndale Edition (1981). Quarto Publishing, London, pp.182-189. ISBN 0-905-746-24-4.</ref><ref>[http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9045345/Khotan-rug Khotan rug - Britannica Online Encyclopedia<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>


Let us call <math>\Omega(E) \ </math> the number of micro-states corresponding to this value of the system's energy. The macroscopic state of maximal [[entropy]] for the system is the one in which all micro-states are equally likely to occur, with probability <math>{1/{\Omega (E)}} </math>, during the system's fluctuations.
:"The rich natural colours and designs of Hetian carpets have been treasured all over Central Asia for centuries. They are especially valuable because of the city's especially long, thick wool. Villagers make carpets as a sideline, selling them at the bazaar or to private buyers from other parts of Xinjiang. Pieces of chain-stitch embroidery made with a hooked needle are much prized."<ref>Bonavia, Judy. ''The Silk Road: Xi'an to Kashgar.'' Revised by Christopher Baumer (2004), p. 308. Odyssey Publications. ISBN 962-217-741-7.</ref>


::<math>
Silk production is still a major industry employing more than a thousand workers and producing some 150 million metres of silk annually. Silk weaving by [[Uighur]] women is a thriving [[cottage industry]], some of it produced using traditional methods.<ref>Bonavia, Judy. ''The Silk Road: Xi'an to Kashgar.'' Revised by Christopher Baumer (2004), pp. 307-308. Odyssey Publications. ISBN 962-217-741-7.</ref>
S=-k_B\sum_{i=1}^{\Omega (E)} \left \{ {1\over{\Omega (E)}} \ln{1\over{\Omega (E)}} \right \} =k_B\ln \left(\Omega (E) \right)
</math>
:where
:<math>S \ </math> is the system [[entropy]],
:<math>k_B \ </math> is [[Boltzmann's constant]]


== Canonical ensemble ==
==Footnotes==
{{main|Canonical ensemble}}
{{Reflist}}
In canonical ensemble N, V and T are fixed. Invoking the concept of the canonical ensemble, it is possible to derive the probability <math>P_i \ </math> that a macroscopic system in [[thermal equilibrium]] with its environment, will be in a given microstate with energy <math>E_i \ </math> according to the [[Boltzmann distribution]]:


::<math>P_i = {e^{-\beta E_i}\over{\sum_j^{j_{max}}e^{-\beta E_j}}}</math>
==References==
*Hill, John E. 1988. “Notes on the Dating of Khotanese History.” ''Indo-Iranian Journal'' 31 (1988), pp. 179-190.
*Hill, John E. 2003. "Annotated Translation of the Chapter on the Western Regions according to the ''Hou Hanshu''." 2nd Draft Edition. [http://depts.washington.edu/silkroad/texts/hhshu/hou_han_shu.html]
*Hill, John E. 2004. ''The Peoples of the West from the Weilüe'' 魏略 ''by Yu Huan'' 魚豢'': A Third Century Chinese Account Composed between 239 and 265 CE.'' Draft annotated English translation. [http://depts.washington.edu/silkroad/texts/weilue/weilue.html]
*Hulsewé, A. F. P. and Loewe, M. A. N. 1979. ''China in Central Asia: The Early Stage 125 BC &ndash; AD 23: an annotated translation of chapters 61 and 96 of the History of the Former Han Dynasty''. E. J. Brill, Leiden.
*Legge, James 1886. ''A Record of Buddhistic Kingdoms: Being an account by the Chinese Monk Fa-Hien of his travels in India and Ceylon (A.D. 399-414) in search of the Buddhist Books of Discipline''. Oxford, Clarendon Press. Reprint: New York, Paragon Book Reprint Corp. 1965.
*Mallory, J. P. and Mair, Victor H. 2000. ''The Tarim Mummies: Ancient China and the Mystery of the Earliest Peoples from the West''. Thames & Hudson. London. 2000.
*Montell, Gösta, ''Sven Hedin’s Archaeological Collections from Khotan: Terra-cottas from Yotkan and Dandan-Uiliq'', The Bulletin of the Museum of Far Eastern Antiquities 7 (1936), pp. 145-221.
*Montell, Gösta, ''Sven Hedin’s Archaeological Collections from Khotan II'' (appendix by Helmer Smith (pp. 101-102)), The Bulletin of the Museum of Far Eastern Antiquities 10 (1938), pp. 83-113.
*Puri, B. N. ''Buddhism in Central Asia'', Motilal Banarsidass Publishers Private Limited, Delhi, 1987. (2000 reprint).
*Stein, Aurel M. 1907. ''Ancient Khotan: Detailed report of archaeological explorations in Chinese Turkestan'', 2 vols. Clarendon Press. Oxford. [http://dsr.nii.ac.jp/toyobunko/]
*Stein, Aurel M. 1921. ''Serindia: Detailed report of explorations in Central Asia and westernmost China'', 5 vols. London & Oxford. Clarendon Press. Reprint: Delhi. Motilal Banarsidass. 1980. [http://dsr.nii.ac.jp/toyobunko/]
*Watters, Thomas 1904-1905. ''On Yuan Chwang’s Travels in India''. London. Royal Asiatic Society. Reprint: Delhi. Mushiram Manoharlal. 1973.
*Yu, Taishan. 2004. ''A History of the Relationships between the Western and Eastern Han, Wei, Jin, Northern and Southern Dynasties and the Western Regions''. Sino-Platonic Papers No. 131 March, 2004. Dept. of East Asian Languages and Civilizations, University of Pennsylvania.


:where <math>\beta={1\over{kT}}</math>,
==External links==


The temperature <math> T \ </math> arises from the fact that the system is in thermal equilibrium with its environment. The probabilities of the various microstates must add to one, and the [[normalization]] factor in the denominator is the canonical [[Partition function (statistical mechanics)|partition function]]:
{{commons|Khotan}}
*[http://depts.washington.edu/uwch/silkroad/ Silk Road Seattle] (The Silk Road Seattle website contains many useful resources including a number of full-text historical works)
*[http://idp.bl.uk/education/buddhism/khotanese/khotanese.html] (A site devoted to the Buddhism of Khotan with a copy of Sir Aurel Stein's map of the Tarim Basin and Khotan region)
*[http://www.raize.ch/Reisen/velo-eurasien/karten-rollover/western-tibet-highway_satellitenbild_grossplus.jpg Satellite image of region which can be enlarged]
*[http://ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=35406 China: Taklamakan - Desert With No Ocean Underground]


: <math>Z = \sum_j^{j_{max}} e^{-\beta E_j}</math>
{{coor title dm|37|6|N|80|1|E|type:city}}


where <math>E_i \ </math> is the energy of the <math>i \ </math>th microstate of the system. The partition function is a measure of the number of states accessible to the system at a given temperature. The article [[canonical ensemble]] contains a derivation of Boltzmann's factor and the form of the partition function from first principles.
{{Xinjiang Administrative Divisions}}


To sum up, the probability of finding a system at temperature <math>T \ </math> in a particular state with energy <math> E_i \ </math> is
[[Category:Central Asian Buddhist sites]]
[[Category:Cities along the Silk Road]]
[[Category:Cities in Xinjiang]]
[[Category:Uyghurs]]
[[Category:Central Asian Buddhist kingdoms]]
[[Category:Xinjiang]]
[[Category:Ancient peoples of China]]
[[Category:Former countries in Chinese history]]
[[Category:Oases]]


: <math>P_i = \frac{e^{-\beta E_i}}{Z}</math>
[[ca:Hotan]]

[[cs:Chotan]]
=== Thermodynamic Connection ===
[[de:Hotan]]

[[es:Khotan]]
The partition function can be used to find the expected (average) value of any microscopic property of the system, which can then be related to macroscopic variables. For instance, the expected value of the microscopic energy <math> E \ </math> is ''interpreted'' as the microscopic definition of the thermodynamic variable internal energy <math> U \ </math>., and can be obtained by taking the derivative of the partition function with respect to the temperature. Indeed,
[[eo:Hotan]]

[[fr:Hotan]]
: <math>\langle E\rangle={\sum_i E_i e^{-\beta E_i}\over Z}=-{1 \over Z} {dZ \over d\beta}</math>
[[ko:호탄]]

[[id:Hotan]]
implies, together with the interpretation of <math>\langle E\rangle</math> as <math> U \ </math>, the following microscopic definition of [[internal energy]]:
[[lt:Hetianas]]

[[nl:Hotan]]
: <math>U\colon = -{d\ln Z\over d \beta}.</math>
[[ja:ホータン市]]

[[no:Hotan]]
The entropy can be calculated by (see [[Shannon entropy]])
[[ug:Xoten shehiri]]

[[pl:Hotan]]
: <math>{S\over k} = - \sum_i p_i \ln p_i = \sum_i {e^{-\beta E_i}\over Z}(\beta E_i+\ln Z) = \ln Z + \beta U </math>
[[pt:Hotan]]

[[ru:Хотан]]
which implies that
[[sv:Khotan]]

[[tr:Hotan]]
: <math>-\frac{\ln(Z)}{\beta} = U - TS = F</math>
[[zh:和田市]]

is the [[Thermodynamic free energy|free energy]] of the system or in other words,

:<math>Z=e^{-\beta F}\,</math>

Having microscopic expressions for the basic thermodynamic potentials <math> U \ </math> ([[internal energy]]), <math> S \ </math> ([[entropy]]) and <math> F \ </math> ([[Thermodynamic free energy|free energy]]) is sufficient to derive expressions for other thermodynamic quantities. The basic strategy is as follows. There may be an intensive or extensive quantity that enters explicitly in the expression for the microscopic energy <math>E_i \ </math>, for instance magnetic field (intensive) or volume (extensive). Then, the conjugate thermodynamic variables are derivatives of the internal energy. The macroscopic magnetization (extensive) is the derivative of <math> U \ </math> with respect to the (intensive) magnetic field, and the pressure (intensive) is the derivative of <math> U \ </math> with respect to volume (extensive).

The treatment in this section assumes no exchange of matter (i.e. fixed mass and fixed particle numbers). However, the volume of the system is variable which means the density is also variable.

This probability can be used to find the average value, which corresponds to the macroscopic value, of any property, <math>J</math>, that depends on the energetic state of the system by using the formula:

: <math> \langle J \rangle = \sum_i p_i J_i = \sum_i J_i \frac{e^{-\beta E_i}}{Z}</math>

where <math>\langle J \rangle</math> is the average value of property <math> J \ </math>. This equation can be applied to the internal energy, <math> U \ </math>:

: <math>U = \sum_i E_i \frac{e^{-\beta E_i}}{Z}</math>

Subsequently, these equations can be combined with known thermodynamic relationships between <math>U \ </math> and <math> V \ </math> to arrive at an expression for pressure in terms of only temperature, volume and the partition function. Similar relationships in terms of the partition function can be derived for other thermodynamic properties as shown in the following table; see also the detailed explanation in
[http://clesm.mae.ufl.edu/wiki.pub/index.php/Configuration_integral_%28statistical_mechanics%29 configuration integral].

{| class="wikitable"
|-
! style="text-align: left" | [[Hermann Helmholtz|Helmholtz]] [[Helmholtz free energy|free energy]]:
| bgcolor="white" | <math>F = - {\ln Z\over \beta}</math>
|-
! style="text-align: left" | [[Internal energy]]:
| bgcolor="white" | <math>U = -\left( \frac{\partial\ln Z}{\partial\beta} \right)_{N,V}</math>
|-
! style="text-align: left" | [[Pressure]]:
| bgcolor="white" | <math>P = -\left({\partial F\over \partial V}\right)_{N,T}= {1\over \beta} \left( \frac{\partial \ln Z}{\partial V} \right)_{N,T}</math>
|-
! style="text-align: left" | [[Entropy]]:
| bgcolor="white" | <math>S = k (\ln Z + \beta U)\,</math>
|-
! style="text-align: left" | [[Willard Gibbs|Gibbs]] [[Gibbs free energy|free energy]]:
| bgcolor="white" | <math>G = F+PV=-{\ln Z\over \beta} + {V\over \beta} \left( \frac{\partial \ln Z}{\partial V}\right)_{N,T}</math>
|-
! style="text-align: left" | [[Enthalpy]]:
| bgcolor="white" | <math>H = U + PV\,</math>
|-
! style="text-align: left" | Constant volume [[heat capacity]]:
| bgcolor="white" | <math>C_V = \left( \frac{\partial U}{\partial T} \right)_{N,V}</math>
|-
! style="text-align: left" | Constant pressure heat capacity:
| bgcolor="white" | <math>C_P = \left( \frac{\partial H}{\partial T} \right)_{N,P}</math>
|-
! style="text-align: left" | [[Chemical potential]]:
| bgcolor="white" | <math>\mu_i = -{1\over \beta} \left( \frac{\partial \ln Z}{\partial N_i} \right)_{T,V,N}</math>
|-
|}

To clarify, this is not a [[grand canonical ensemble]].

It is often useful to consider the energy of a given molecule to be distributed among a number of modes. For example, translational energy refers to that portion of energy associated with the motion of the center of mass of the molecule. Configurational energy refers to that portion of energy associated with the various attractive and repulsive forces between molecules in a system. The other modes are all considered to be internal to each molecule. They include rotational, vibrational, electronic and nuclear modes. If we assume that each mode is independent (a questionable assumption) the total energy can be expressed as the sum of each of the components:

: <math>E = E_t + E_c + E_n + E_e + E_r + E_v\,</math>

Where the subscripts <math> t \ </math>, <math> c \ </math>, <math> n \ </math>, <math> e \ </math>, <math> r \ </math>, and <math> v \ </math> correspond to translational, configurational, nuclear, electronic, rotational and vibrational modes, respectively. The relationship in this equation can be substituted into the very first equation to give:

: <math>Z = \sum_i e^{-\beta(E_{ti} + E_{ci} + E_{ni} + E_{ei} + E_{ri} + E_{vi})}</math>
: <math>= \sum_i
e^{-\beta E_{ti}}
e^{-\beta E_{ci}}
e^{-\beta E_{ni}}
e^{-\beta E_{ei}}
e^{-\beta E_{ri}}
e^{-\beta E_{vi}}</math>

''If'' we can assume all these modes are completely uncoupled and uncorrelated, so all these factors are in a probability sense completely independent, then
: <math>Z = Z_t Z_c Z_n Z_e Z_r Z_v\,</math>

Thus a partition function can be defined for each mode. Simple expressions have been derived relating each of the various modes to various measurable molecular properties, such as the characteristic rotational or vibrational frequencies.

Expressions for the various molecular partition functions are shown in the following table.

{| class="wikitable"
|-
! style="text-align: left" | Nuclear
| bgcolor="white" | <math>Z_n = 1 \qquad (T < 10^8 K)</math>
|-
! style="text-align: left" | Electronic
| bgcolor="white" | <math>Z_e = W_0 e^{kT D_e + W_1 e^{-\theta_{e1}/T} + \cdots}</math>
|-
! style="text-align: left" | Vibrational
| bgcolor="white" | <math>Z_v = \prod_j \frac{e^{-\theta_{vj} / 2T}}{1 - e^{-\theta_{vj} / T}}</math>
|-
! style="text-align: left" | Rotational (linear)
| bgcolor="white" | <math>Z_r = \frac{T}{\sigma} \theta_r</math>
|-
! style="text-align: left" | Rotational (non-linear)
| bgcolor="white" | <math>Z_r = \frac{1}{\sigma}\sqrt{\frac{{\pi}T^3}{\theta_A \theta_B \theta_C}}</math>
|-
! style="text-align: left" | Translational
| bgcolor="white" | <math>Z_t = \frac{(2 \pi mkT)^{3/2}}{h^3}</math>
|-
! style="text-align: left" | Configurational (ideal gas)
| bgcolor="white" | <math>Z_c = V\,</math>
|-
|}

These equations can be combined with those in the first table to determine the contribution of a particular energy mode to a thermodynamic property. For example the "rotational pressure" could be determined in this manner. The total pressure could be found by summing the pressure contributions from all of the individual modes, ie:

: <math>P = P_t + P_c + P_n + P_e + P_r + P_v\,</math>

== Grand canonical ensemble ==
{{main|Grand canonical ensemble}}

In grand canonical ensemble V, T and chemical potential are fixed. If the system under study is an open system, (matter can be exchanged), ''but'' particle number is not conserved, we would have to introduce [[chemical potential]]s, μ<sub>j</sub>, j=1,...,n and replace the canonical [[Partition function (statistical mechanics)|partition function]] with the [[grand canonical ensemble|grand canonical partition function]]:

: <math>\Xi(V,T,\mu) = \sum_i \exp\left(\beta \left[\sum_{j=1}^n \mu_j N_{ij}-E_i\right ]\right)</math>

where N<sub>ij</sub> is the number of j<sup>th</sup> species particles in the i<sup>th</sup> configuration. Sometimes, we also have other variables to add to the [[Partition function (statistical mechanics)|partition function]], one corresponding to each [[Conservation law|conserved]] quantity. Most of them, however, can be safely interpreted as chemical potentials. In most condensed matter systems, things are nonrelativistic and mass is conserved. However, most condensed matter systems of interest also conserve particle number approximately (metastably) and the mass (nonrelativistically) is none other than the sum of the number of each type of particle times its mass. Mass is inversely related to density, which is the conjugate variable to pressure. For the rest of this article, we will ignore this complication and pretend chemical potentials don't matter. See [[grand canonical ensemble]].

Let's rework everything using a grand canonical ensemble this time. The volume is left fixed and does not figure in at all in this treatment. As before, ''j'' is the index for those particles of species ''j'' and ''i'' is the index for microstate ''i'':

: <math>U = \sum_i E_i \frac{\exp(-\beta (E_i-\sum_j \mu_j N_{ij}))}{\Xi}</math>
: <math>N_j = \sum_i N_{ij} \frac{\exp(-\beta (E_i-\sum_j \mu_j N_{ij}))}{\Xi}</math>

<table border="1" style="border-collapse: collapse;">
<tr><td>[[Grand potential]]:</td>
<td><math>\Phi_{G} = - {\ln \Xi\over \beta}</math></td></tr>
<tr><td>[[Internal energy]]:</td>
<td><math>U = -\left( \frac{\partial\ln \Xi}{\partial\beta} \right)_{\mu}+\sum_i{\mu_i\over\beta}\left({\partial \ln \Xi\over \partial \mu_i}\right )_{\beta}</math></td></tr>
<tr><td>Particle number:</td>
<td><math>N_i={1\over\beta}\left({\partial \ln \Xi\over \partial \mu_i}\right)_\beta</math></td></tr>
<tr><td>[[Entropy]]:</td>
<td><math>S = k (\ln \Xi + \beta U- \beta \sum_i \mu_i N_i)\,</math></td></tr>
<tr><td>[[Helmholtz free energy]]:</td>
<td><math>F = G+\sum_i \mu_i N_i=-{\ln \Xi\over \beta} +\sum_i{\mu_i\over \beta} \left( \frac{\partial \ln \Xi}{\partial \mu_i}\right)_{\beta}</math></td></tr>
</table>

== Equivalence between descriptions at the [[thermodynamic limit]]==

All the above descriptions differ in the way they allow the given system to fluctuate between its configurations.

In the micro-canonical ensemble, the system exchanges no energy with the outside world, and is therefore not subject to energy fluctuations, while in the canonical ensemble, the system is free to exchange energy with the outside in the form of [[heat]].

In the [[thermodynamic limit]], which is the limit of large systems, fluctuations become negligible, so that all these descriptions converge to the same description. In other words, the macroscopic behavior of a system does not depend on the particular ensemble used for its description.

Given these considerations, the best ensemble to choose for the calculation of the properties of a macroscopic system is that ensemble which allows the result be most easily derived.

== Random walkers ==

The study of long chain [[polymers]] has been a source of problems within the realms of statistical mechanics since about the 1950s. One of the reasons however that scientists were interested in their study is that the equations governing the behaviour of a polymer chain were independent of the chain chemistry. What is more, the governing equation turns out to be a random (diffusive) walk in space. Indeed, Schrödinger's equation is itself a diffusion equation in imaginary time, <math>t' = it</math>.

=== Random walks in time ===

The first example of a random walk is one in space, whereby a particle undergoes a random motion due to external forces in its surrounding medium. A typical example would be a pollen grain in a beaker of water. If one could somehow "dye" the path the pollen grain has taken, the path observed is defined as a random walk.

Consider a toy problem, of a train moving along a 1D track in the x-direction. Suppose that the train moves either a distance of + or - a fixed distance '''b''', depending on whether a coin lands heads or tails when flipped. Lets start by considering the statistics of the steps the toy train takes (where <math>S_{i}</math> is the ith step taken):

<math>\langle S_{i} \rangle = 0</math> ; due to ''a priori'' equal probabilities<br>
<math>\langle S_{i} S_{j} \rangle = b^2 \delta_{ij}</math>

The second quantity is known as the [[correlation function]]. The delta is the [[kronecker delta]] which tells us that if the indices ''i'' and ''j'' are different, then the result is 0, but if ''i'' = ''j'' then the [[kronecker delta]] is 1, so the [[correlation function]] returns a value of <math>b^2</math>. This makes sense, because if ''i'' = ''j'' then we are considering the same step. Rather trivially then it can be shown that the average displacement of the train on the x-axis is 0;

<math>x = \sum_{i=1}^{N} S_{i}</math><br>
<math>\langle x \rangle = \langle \sum_{i=1}^{N} S_{i} \rangle</math><br>
<math>\langle x \rangle = \sum_{i=1}^{N} \langle S_{i} \rangle</math>

As stated <math>\langle S_{i} \rangle</math> is 0, so the sum of 0 is still 0.
It can also be shown, using the same method demonstrated above, to calculate the root mean square value of problem. The result of this calculation is given below

<math>x_{rms} = \sqrt {\langle x^2 \rangle} = b \sqrt N </math>

From the [[diffusion equation]] it can be shown that the distance a diffusing particle moves in a media is proportional to the root of the time the system has been diffusing for, where the proportionality constant is the root of the diffusion constant. The above relation, although cosmetically different reveals similar physics, where ''N'' is simply the number of steps moved (is loosely connected with time) and ''b'' is the characteristic step length. As a consequence we can consider diffusion as a random walk process.

=== Random walks in space ===

[[Random walk]]s in space can be thought of as snapshots of the path taken by a random walker in time. One such example is the spatial configuration of long chain polymers.

There are two types of random walk in space: ''[[self-avoiding random walk]]s'', where the links of the polymer chain interact and do not overlap in space, and ''pure random'' walks, where the links of the polymer chain are non-interacting and links are free to lie on top of one another. The former type is most applicable to physical systems, but their solutions are harder to get at from first principles.

By considering a freely jointed, non-interacting polymer chain, the end-to-end vector is <math>\mathbf{R} = \sum_{i=1}^{N} \mathbf r_i</math> where <math>\mathbf {r}_{i}</math> is the vector position of the ''i''-th link in the chain.
As a result of the [[central limit theorem]], if N >> 1 then the we expect a [[Gaussian distribution]] for the end-to-end vector. We can also make statements of the statistics of the links themselves;
<br>
<math>\langle \mathbf{r}_{i} \rangle = 0</math> ; by the isotropy of space <br>
<math>\langle \mathbf{r}_{i} \cdot \mathbf{r}_{j} \rangle = 3 b^2 \delta_{ij}</math> ; all the links in the chain are uncorrelated with one another
<br>
Using the statistics of the individual links, it is easily shown that <math>\langle \mathbf R \rangle = 0</math> and <math>\langle \mathbf R \cdot \mathbf R \rangle = 3Nb^2</math>. Notice this last result is the same as that found for random walks in time.

Assuming, as stated, that that distribution of end-to-end vectors for a very large number of identical polymer chains is gaussian, the probability distribution has the following form

<math>P = \frac{1}{\left (\frac{2 \pi N b^2}{3} \right )^{3/2}} \exp \frac {- 3\mathbf R \cdot \mathbf R}{2Nb^2}</math>

What use is this to us? Recall that according to the principle of equally likely ''a priori'' probabilities, the number of microstates, Ω, at some physical value is directly proportional to the probability distribution at that physical value, ''viz'';

<math>\Omega \left ( \mathbf{R} \right ) = c P\left ( \mathbf{R} \right )</math>

where c is an arbitrary proportionality constant. Given our distribution function, there is a maxima corresponding to <math>\mathbf {R} = 0</math>. Physically this amounts to there being more microstates which have an end-to-end vector of 0 than any other microstate. Now by considering<br>
<br>
<math>S \left ( \mathbf {R} \right ) = k_B \ln \Omega {\left ( \mathbf R \right) } </math><br>
<math>\Delta S \left( \mathbf {R} \right ) = S \left( \mathbf {R} \right ) - S \left (0 \right )</math><br>
<math>\Delta F = - T \Delta S \left ( \mathbf {R} \right )</math><br>
<br>
where ''F'' is the [[Helmholtz free energy]] it is trivial to show that <br>
<br>
<math>\Delta F = k_B T \frac {3R^2}{2Nb^2} = \frac {1}{2} K R^2 \quad ; K = \frac {3 k_B T}{Nb^2}</math><br>
<br>
A Hookian spring! <br>
This result is known as the '''Entropic Spring Result''' and amounts to saying that upon stretching a polymer chain you are doing work on the system to drag it away from its (preferred) equilibrium state. An example of this is a common elastic band, composed of long chain (rubber) polymers. By stretching the elastic band you are doing work on the system and the band behaves like a conventional spring. What is particularly astonishing about this result however, is that the work done in stretching the polymer chain can be related entirely to the change in entropy of the system as a result of the stretching.

== See also ==

* [[Dangerously irrelevant]]
* [[Fluctuation dissipation theorem]]
* [[Ising Model]]
* [[List of notable textbooks in statistical mechanics]]
* [[list of publications in physics#Statistical mechanics|Important Publications in Statistical Mechanics]]
* [[Ludwig Boltzmann]]
* [[Mean field theory]]
* [[Nanomechanics]]
* [[Paul Ehrenfest]]
* [[Statistical physics]]
* [[Thermodynamic limit]]
{| class="wikitable" border-color:#ccc"
|+ '''A Table of Statistical Mechanics Articles'''
|-
! align="center" |
! align="center" |Maxwell Boltzmann
! align="center" |Bose-Einstein
! align="center" |Fermi-Dirac
|-
! align="center" |Particle
| align="center" |
| align="center" |[[Boson]]
| align="center" |[[Fermion]]
|-
! align="center" |Statistics
| align="center" colspan=3 |
[[Partition function (statistical mechanics)|Partition function]]<br>
[[Identical particles#Statistical properties|Statistical properties]]<br>
[[Microcanonical ensemble]] | [[Canonical ensemble]] | [[Grand canonical ensemble]]
|-
! align="center" |Statistics
| align="center" |
[[Maxwell-Boltzmann statistics]]<br>
[[Maxwell-Boltzmann distribution]]<br>
[[Boltzmann distribution]]<br>
[[Gibbs paradox]]
| align="center" |[[Bose-Einstein statistics]]
| align="center" |[[Fermi-Dirac statistics]]
|-
! align="center" | Thomas-Fermi <br> approximation
| align="center" colspan=3 | [[gas in a box]]<br>[[gas in a harmonic trap]]
|-
! align="center" |Gas
| align="center" |[[Ideal gas]]
| align="center" |
[[Bose gas]]<br>
[[Debye model]]<br>
[[Bose-Einstein condensate]]<br>
[[Planck's law of black body radiation]]
| align="center" |
[[Fermi gas]]<br>
[[Fermion condensate]]
|-
! align="center" | Chemical<br>Equilibrium
| align="center" | Classical [[Chemical equilibrium]]
| align="center" colspan=2|
|}

== References ==
{{reflist}}
* {{cite book | author=Chandler, David | title=Introduction to Modern Statistical Mechanics | publisher=Oxford University Press | year=1987 |isbn=0-19-504277-8 | oclc=13946448}}
* {{cite book | author=Huang, Kerson | title=Statistical Mechanics | publisher=Wiley, John & Sons, Inc | year=1990 |isbn=0-471-81518-7 | oclc=15017884}}
* {{cite book |last=Kittel |first=Charles |authorlink=Charles Kittel |coauthors=Herbert Kroemer |title=Thermal Physics, Second Edition |publisher=W.H. Freeman and Company |year=1980 |isbn=0716710889 |location=San Francisco |oclc=32932988 48236639 5171399}}
* {{cite book | author=McQuarrie, Donald | title=Statistical Mechanics (2nd rev. Ed.) | publisher=University Science Books | year=2000 |isbn=1-891389-15-7 | oclc=43370175}}
* {{cite book | author=Dill, Ken; Bromberg, Sarina | title=Molecular Driving Forces | publisher=Garland Science | year=2003 |isbn=0-8153-2051-5 | oclc=47915710 51235414}}
*[[List of notable textbooks in statistical mechanics]]

== External links ==
* [http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/statphys-statmech/ Philosophy of Statistical Mechanics] article by Lawrence Sklar for the [[Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy]].
* [http://www.sklogwiki.org/ Sklogwiki - Thermodynamics, statistical mechanics, and the computer simulation of materials.] SklogWiki is particularly orientated towards liquids and soft condensed matter.

{{Physics-footer}}

<!---->

[[Category:Fundamental physics concepts]]
[[Category:Physics]]
[[Category:Statistical mechanics| ]]
[[Category:Mechanics]]
[[Category:Thermodynamics]]

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[[de:Statistische Mechanik]]
[[el:Στατιστική μηχανική]]
[[es:Física estadística]]
[[fa:مکانیک آماری]]
[[fr:Physique statistique]]
[[gl:Mecánica estatística]]
[[ko:통계역학]]
[[hr:Statistička mehanika]]
[[id:Mekanika statistika]]
[[is:Safneðlisfræði]]
[[it:Meccanica statistica]]
[[he:פיזיקה סטטיסטית]]
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[[nl:Statistische thermodynamica]]
[[ja:統計力学]]
[[nn:Statistisk mekanikk]]
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[[pt:Mecânica estatística]]
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Revision as of 04:53, 11 October 2008

Statistical mechanics is the application of probability theory, which includes mathematical tools for dealing with large populations, to the field of mechanics, which is concerned with the motion of particles or objects when subjected to a force. Statistical mechanics, sometimes called statistical physics, can be viewed as a subfield of physics and chemistry. Pioneers in establishing the field were Ludwig Boltzmann and Josiah Willard Gibbs.

It provides a framework for relating the microscopic properties of individual atoms and molecules to the macroscopic or bulk properties of materials that can be observed in everyday life, therefore explaining thermodynamics as a natural result of statistics and mechanics (classical and quantum) at the microscopic level. In particular, it can be used to calculate the thermodynamic properties of bulk materials from the spectroscopic data of individual molecules.

This ability to make macroscopic predictions based on microscopic properties is the main advantage of statistical mechanics over thermodynamics. Both theories are governed by the second law of thermodynamics through the medium of entropy. However, entropy in thermodynamics can only be known empirically, whereas in statistical mechanics, it is a function of the distribution of the system on its micro-states.

Fundamental postulate

The fundamental postulate in statistical mechanics (also known as the equal a priori probability postulate) is the following:

Given an isolated system in equilibrium, it is found with equal probability in each of its accessible microstates.

This postulate is a fundamental assumption in statistical mechanics - it states that a system in equilibrium does not have any preference for any of its available microstates. Given Ω microstates at a particular energy, the probability of finding the system in a particular microstate is p = 1/Ω.

This postulate is necessary because it allows one to conclude that for a system at equilibrium, the thermodynamic state (macrostate) which could result from the largest number of microstates is also the most probable macrostate of the system.

The postulate is justified in part, for classical systems, by Liouville's theorem (Hamiltonian), which shows that if the distribution of system points through accessible phase space is uniform at some time, it remains so at later times.

Similar justification for a discrete system is provided by the mechanism of detailed balance.

This allows for the definition of the information function (in the context of information theory):...

When all rhos are equal, I is minimal, which reflects the fact that we have minimal information about the system. When our information is maximal, i.e. one rho is equal to one and the rest to zero (we know what state the system is in), the function is maximal. [Comments: It should be "When all rhos are equal, I is maximal...", please have a check] This "information function" is the same as the reduced entropic function in thermodynamics.

Microcanonical ensemble

In microcanonical ensemble N, V and E are fixed. Since the second law of thermodynamics applies to isolated systems, the first case investigated will correspond to this case. The Microcanonical ensemble describes an isolated system.

The entropy of such a system can only increase, so that the maximum of its entropy corresponds to an equilibrium state for the system.

Because an isolated system keeps a constant energy, the total energy of the system does not fluctuate. Thus, the system can access only those of its micro-states that correspond to a given value E of the energy. The internal energy of the system is then strictly equal to its energy.

Let us call the number of micro-states corresponding to this value of the system's energy. The macroscopic state of maximal entropy for the system is the one in which all micro-states are equally likely to occur, with probability , during the system's fluctuations.

where
is the system entropy,
is Boltzmann's constant

Canonical ensemble

In canonical ensemble N, V and T are fixed. Invoking the concept of the canonical ensemble, it is possible to derive the probability that a macroscopic system in thermal equilibrium with its environment, will be in a given microstate with energy according to the Boltzmann distribution:

where ,

The temperature arises from the fact that the system is in thermal equilibrium with its environment. The probabilities of the various microstates must add to one, and the normalization factor in the denominator is the canonical partition function:

where is the energy of the th microstate of the system. The partition function is a measure of the number of states accessible to the system at a given temperature. The article canonical ensemble contains a derivation of Boltzmann's factor and the form of the partition function from first principles.

To sum up, the probability of finding a system at temperature in a particular state with energy is

Thermodynamic Connection

The partition function can be used to find the expected (average) value of any microscopic property of the system, which can then be related to macroscopic variables. For instance, the expected value of the microscopic energy is interpreted as the microscopic definition of the thermodynamic variable internal energy ., and can be obtained by taking the derivative of the partition function with respect to the temperature. Indeed,

implies, together with the interpretation of as , the following microscopic definition of internal energy:

The entropy can be calculated by (see Shannon entropy)

which implies that

is the free energy of the system or in other words,

Having microscopic expressions for the basic thermodynamic potentials (internal energy), (entropy) and (free energy) is sufficient to derive expressions for other thermodynamic quantities. The basic strategy is as follows. There may be an intensive or extensive quantity that enters explicitly in the expression for the microscopic energy , for instance magnetic field (intensive) or volume (extensive). Then, the conjugate thermodynamic variables are derivatives of the internal energy. The macroscopic magnetization (extensive) is the derivative of with respect to the (intensive) magnetic field, and the pressure (intensive) is the derivative of with respect to volume (extensive).

The treatment in this section assumes no exchange of matter (i.e. fixed mass and fixed particle numbers). However, the volume of the system is variable which means the density is also variable.

This probability can be used to find the average value, which corresponds to the macroscopic value, of any property, , that depends on the energetic state of the system by using the formula:

where is the average value of property . This equation can be applied to the internal energy, :

Subsequently, these equations can be combined with known thermodynamic relationships between and to arrive at an expression for pressure in terms of only temperature, volume and the partition function. Similar relationships in terms of the partition function can be derived for other thermodynamic properties as shown in the following table; see also the detailed explanation in configuration integral.

Helmholtz free energy:
Internal energy:
Pressure:
Entropy:
Gibbs free energy:
Enthalpy:
Constant volume heat capacity:
Constant pressure heat capacity:
Chemical potential:

To clarify, this is not a grand canonical ensemble.

It is often useful to consider the energy of a given molecule to be distributed among a number of modes. For example, translational energy refers to that portion of energy associated with the motion of the center of mass of the molecule. Configurational energy refers to that portion of energy associated with the various attractive and repulsive forces between molecules in a system. The other modes are all considered to be internal to each molecule. They include rotational, vibrational, electronic and nuclear modes. If we assume that each mode is independent (a questionable assumption) the total energy can be expressed as the sum of each of the components:

Where the subscripts , , , , , and correspond to translational, configurational, nuclear, electronic, rotational and vibrational modes, respectively. The relationship in this equation can be substituted into the very first equation to give:

If we can assume all these modes are completely uncoupled and uncorrelated, so all these factors are in a probability sense completely independent, then

Thus a partition function can be defined for each mode. Simple expressions have been derived relating each of the various modes to various measurable molecular properties, such as the characteristic rotational or vibrational frequencies.

Expressions for the various molecular partition functions are shown in the following table.

Nuclear
Electronic
Vibrational
Rotational (linear)
Rotational (non-linear)
Translational
Configurational (ideal gas)

These equations can be combined with those in the first table to determine the contribution of a particular energy mode to a thermodynamic property. For example the "rotational pressure" could be determined in this manner. The total pressure could be found by summing the pressure contributions from all of the individual modes, ie:

Grand canonical ensemble

In grand canonical ensemble V, T and chemical potential are fixed. If the system under study is an open system, (matter can be exchanged), but particle number is not conserved, we would have to introduce chemical potentials, μj, j=1,...,n and replace the canonical partition function with the grand canonical partition function:

where Nij is the number of jth species particles in the ith configuration. Sometimes, we also have other variables to add to the partition function, one corresponding to each conserved quantity. Most of them, however, can be safely interpreted as chemical potentials. In most condensed matter systems, things are nonrelativistic and mass is conserved. However, most condensed matter systems of interest also conserve particle number approximately (metastably) and the mass (nonrelativistically) is none other than the sum of the number of each type of particle times its mass. Mass is inversely related to density, which is the conjugate variable to pressure. For the rest of this article, we will ignore this complication and pretend chemical potentials don't matter. See grand canonical ensemble.

Let's rework everything using a grand canonical ensemble this time. The volume is left fixed and does not figure in at all in this treatment. As before, j is the index for those particles of species j and i is the index for microstate i:

Grand potential:
Internal energy:
Particle number:
Entropy:
Helmholtz free energy:

Equivalence between descriptions at the thermodynamic limit

All the above descriptions differ in the way they allow the given system to fluctuate between its configurations.

In the micro-canonical ensemble, the system exchanges no energy with the outside world, and is therefore not subject to energy fluctuations, while in the canonical ensemble, the system is free to exchange energy with the outside in the form of heat.

In the thermodynamic limit, which is the limit of large systems, fluctuations become negligible, so that all these descriptions converge to the same description. In other words, the macroscopic behavior of a system does not depend on the particular ensemble used for its description.

Given these considerations, the best ensemble to choose for the calculation of the properties of a macroscopic system is that ensemble which allows the result be most easily derived.

Random walkers

The study of long chain polymers has been a source of problems within the realms of statistical mechanics since about the 1950s. One of the reasons however that scientists were interested in their study is that the equations governing the behaviour of a polymer chain were independent of the chain chemistry. What is more, the governing equation turns out to be a random (diffusive) walk in space. Indeed, Schrödinger's equation is itself a diffusion equation in imaginary time, .

Random walks in time

The first example of a random walk is one in space, whereby a particle undergoes a random motion due to external forces in its surrounding medium. A typical example would be a pollen grain in a beaker of water. If one could somehow "dye" the path the pollen grain has taken, the path observed is defined as a random walk.

Consider a toy problem, of a train moving along a 1D track in the x-direction. Suppose that the train moves either a distance of + or - a fixed distance b, depending on whether a coin lands heads or tails when flipped. Lets start by considering the statistics of the steps the toy train takes (where is the ith step taken):

 ; due to a priori equal probabilities

The second quantity is known as the correlation function. The delta is the kronecker delta which tells us that if the indices i and j are different, then the result is 0, but if i = j then the kronecker delta is 1, so the correlation function returns a value of . This makes sense, because if i = j then we are considering the same step. Rather trivially then it can be shown that the average displacement of the train on the x-axis is 0;



As stated is 0, so the sum of 0 is still 0. It can also be shown, using the same method demonstrated above, to calculate the root mean square value of problem. The result of this calculation is given below

From the diffusion equation it can be shown that the distance a diffusing particle moves in a media is proportional to the root of the time the system has been diffusing for, where the proportionality constant is the root of the diffusion constant. The above relation, although cosmetically different reveals similar physics, where N is simply the number of steps moved (is loosely connected with time) and b is the characteristic step length. As a consequence we can consider diffusion as a random walk process.

Random walks in space

Random walks in space can be thought of as snapshots of the path taken by a random walker in time. One such example is the spatial configuration of long chain polymers.

There are two types of random walk in space: self-avoiding random walks, where the links of the polymer chain interact and do not overlap in space, and pure random walks, where the links of the polymer chain are non-interacting and links are free to lie on top of one another. The former type is most applicable to physical systems, but their solutions are harder to get at from first principles.

By considering a freely jointed, non-interacting polymer chain, the end-to-end vector is where is the vector position of the i-th link in the chain. As a result of the central limit theorem, if N >> 1 then the we expect a Gaussian distribution for the end-to-end vector. We can also make statements of the statistics of the links themselves;
 ; by the isotropy of space
 ; all the links in the chain are uncorrelated with one another
Using the statistics of the individual links, it is easily shown that and . Notice this last result is the same as that found for random walks in time.

Assuming, as stated, that that distribution of end-to-end vectors for a very large number of identical polymer chains is gaussian, the probability distribution has the following form

What use is this to us? Recall that according to the principle of equally likely a priori probabilities, the number of microstates, Ω, at some physical value is directly proportional to the probability distribution at that physical value, viz;

where c is an arbitrary proportionality constant. Given our distribution function, there is a maxima corresponding to . Physically this amounts to there being more microstates which have an end-to-end vector of 0 than any other microstate. Now by considering





where F is the Helmholtz free energy it is trivial to show that



A Hookian spring!
This result is known as the Entropic Spring Result and amounts to saying that upon stretching a polymer chain you are doing work on the system to drag it away from its (preferred) equilibrium state. An example of this is a common elastic band, composed of long chain (rubber) polymers. By stretching the elastic band you are doing work on the system and the band behaves like a conventional spring. What is particularly astonishing about this result however, is that the work done in stretching the polymer chain can be related entirely to the change in entropy of the system as a result of the stretching.

See also

A Table of Statistical Mechanics Articles
Maxwell Boltzmann Bose-Einstein Fermi-Dirac
Particle Boson Fermion
Statistics

Partition function
Statistical properties
Microcanonical ensemble | Canonical ensemble | Grand canonical ensemble

Statistics

Maxwell-Boltzmann statistics
Maxwell-Boltzmann distribution
Boltzmann distribution
Gibbs paradox

Bose-Einstein statistics Fermi-Dirac statistics
Thomas-Fermi
approximation
gas in a box
gas in a harmonic trap
Gas Ideal gas

Bose gas
Debye model
Bose-Einstein condensate
Planck's law of black body radiation

Fermi gas
Fermion condensate

Chemical
Equilibrium
Classical Chemical equilibrium

References

  • Chandler, David (1987). Introduction to Modern Statistical Mechanics. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-504277-8. OCLC 13946448.
  • Huang, Kerson (1990). Statistical Mechanics. Wiley, John & Sons, Inc. ISBN 0-471-81518-7. OCLC 15017884.
  • Kittel, Charles (1980). Thermal Physics, Second Edition. San Francisco: W.H. Freeman and Company. ISBN 0716710889. OCLC 32932988 48236639 5171399. {{cite book}}: Check |oclc= value (help); Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)
  • McQuarrie, Donald (2000). Statistical Mechanics (2nd rev. Ed.). University Science Books. ISBN 1-891389-15-7. OCLC 43370175.
  • Dill, Ken; Bromberg, Sarina (2003). Molecular Driving Forces. Garland Science. ISBN 0-8153-2051-5. OCLC 47915710 51235414. {{cite book}}: Check |oclc= value (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • List of notable textbooks in statistical mechanics

External links