Bose Einstein statistics

The Bose-Einstein statistics or Bose-Einstein distribution , named after Satyendranath Bose (1894–1974) and Albert Einstein (1879–1955), is a probability distribution in quantum statistics ( there also the derivation ). It describes the mean occupation number of a quantum state of energy in thermodynamic equilibrium at absolute temperature for identical bosons as occupying particles.
Similarly, the Fermi-Dirac statistics exist for fermions , which, like the Bose-Einstein statistics, are transferred to the Boltzmann statistics in the extreme case of high energy .
Central point of the Bose-Einstein statistics is that while permutation of all four variables of two bosons ( and : local variable; : Spin variable) the wave function and the state vector of a many-body system not the sign changes , while in the Fermi-Dirac statistics it very probably changes . In contrast to fermions, several bosons can therefore be in the same one-particle state, i.e. have the same quantum numbers .
If there is no interaction
If there is no interaction ( Bosegas ), the following formula results for bosons:
With
- the chemical potential , which is always less for bosons than the lowest possible energy value: ; therefore the Bose-Einstein statistics are only defined for energy values .
- of energy normalization . The choice of depends on the temperature scale used:
- Usually it is chosen to with the Boltzmann constant ;
- it is when the temperature is measured in units of energy such as joules ; this happens even if it does not appear in the definition of entropy - which then has no units.
Below a very low critical temperature , if there is no interaction - assuming that it tends towards the energy minimum - the Bose-Einstein condensation is obtained .
Note that it is the occupation number of a quantum state. If the occupation number of a degenerate energy level is required, the above expression must also be multiplied by the corresponding degree of degeneracy ( : spin, always an integer for bosons), cf. also multiplicity .
literature
- U. Krey, A. Owen, Basic Theoretical Physics - a Concise Overview , Berlin Heidelberg New York, Springer 2007, ISBN 978-3-540-36804-5 (in English)
- LD Landau, EM Lifschitz, Statistical Physics , Verlag Harri Deutsch, former Akademie Verlag Berlin 1987. (uses unusual temperature unit).