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Introduction To Statistical Physics Solution Manual: Kerson Huang
Introduction To Statistical Physics Solution Manual: Kerson Huang
Solution Manual
Kerson Huang
ii
Chapter 1
1.1
Mass of water =106 g, temperature raised by 20 C.
Heat needed Q = 2 107 cal = 8.37107 J.=23.2 kwh.
Work needed = mgh = 1415029000 = 6.09107 ft-lb =22.9 kwh.
1.2
Work done along various paths are as follows
ab:
Z b
Z b
Vb
dV
P dV = N kB T1
= N kB T1 ln
V
V
a
a
a
cd:
Vb
Pd (Vd Vb ) = N kB T3 1
Vd
de:
N kB T3
dV
Va
= N kB T3 ln
V
Vd
No work is done along bc and ea. The total work done is the sum of the
above. Heat absorbed equals total work done, since internal energy is unchanged
in a closed cycle.
1.3
(a)
=
1 V
bV0 T b1
=
V T
T0b V
(b)
V
bV0 T b1
T
T0b
N kB T
N kB T0b 1b
T
=
V
V0
Work done = P V = bN kB T
P
CHAPTER 1.
1.4
Consider an element of the column of gas, of unit cross section, and height
between z and z+dz. The weight of the element is gdM , where dM is the mass
of the element: dM = mndz, where m is the molecular mass, and n = P/kB T
is the local density, with P the pressure. For equilibrium, the weight must
equal the pressure dierential: dP = gdM .Thus, dP/P = (mg/kB T )dz. At
constant T , we have dp/P = dn/n.Therefore
n(z) = n(0)emgz/kB T
1.5
No change in internal energy, and no work is done. Therefore total heat
absorbed Q = Q1 + Q2 = 0. That is, heat just pass from one body to the
other. Suppose the final temperature is T . Then
Q1 = C1 (T T1 ), Q2 = C2 (T T2 ). Therefore
T =
C1 T1 + C2 T2
C1 + C2
1.6
R
Work done by the system is HdM . Thus the work on the system is
Z
HdM =
T
HdH =
H 2
2T
1.7
Consider the hysteresis cycle in the sense indicated in Fig.1.6. Solve for the
magnetic field:
H = H0 + tanh1 (M/M0 )
R
( + for lower branch, for upper branch.). Using W = HdM , we obtain
W =
M0
M0
= 4M0 H0
1.8
M0
M0
log M
A log log plot of mass vs. A is shown in the following graph. The dashed
line is a straightline for reference.
10
100
1000
A
.
10000
CHAPTER 1.
Chapter 2
2.1
Use the dQ equation with P, T as independent variables:
dQ = CP dT + [(U/P )T + P (V /P )T ]dP
For an ideal gas (U/P )T = 0, P (V /P )T = V. Thus
dQ = CP dT V dP.
The heat capacity is given by
C = CP V (P/T )path .
The path is P = aV b , or equivalently P b+1 = a(N kB T )b by the equation of
state. Hence
V (P/T )path = [ab/(b + 1)]V (N kB T )b T 1 = bN kB /(b + 1). Therefore
C = CP
b
N kB
b+1
1
(4.164 J g1 K1 1 g 10 K) = 1.39 J
30
CHAPTER 2.
Flow rate = 6000 (0.305m)3
T =
2.33 106 J
= 3.27 103 K
2.4
(a)
Since water is incompressible, a unit mass input gives a unit mass output.
The net heat supplied per unit mass is Q = C(T1 T ) C(T T2 ),
where C is the specific heat of water (per unit mass.) In steady state v 2 /2 =
Q. This gives
p
p
v = 2Q = 2C(T1 + T2 2T )
(b)
The entropy depends on the temperature like ln T . A unit volume of water
from each of the input streams has total entropy ln T1 + ln T2 This makes two
unit volumes inthe output
2 ln T . Therefore the change
stream, with entropy
a
21/ 1
= 1/
L
2
+1
(b)
U = Q W , Q = 0.
CV T = W , T = W/CV .
T1 = 2T0 + T = 2T0 (W/CV ), T2 = T0 T = T0 + (W/CV ).
P =
R [2T0 (W/CV )]
RT1
=
V1
A (L + a)
(c)
Ra
W = A 0 dx(P1 P2 )
2a
P0 V0
a
1
W =
1
1
L
L
7
2.6
(a)
P V = U/3, U = V T 4 .
P = T 4 /3.
dS = dQ/T = (dU + P dV )/T.
Integrate along paths with T =const, V =const.
S=
4
V T 3.
3
(b)
S =Constant. T 3 V 1. Thus
T R1
2.7
The heat absorbed by an ideal gas in an isothermal process is
Q = N kT ln(Vf /Vi )
where Vf and Vi are respectively the final and initial volume.The temperature
T in this formula is the ideal-gas temperature.
Draw a Carnot cycle on the P V diagram, and label the corners 1234 clockwise from the upper left.
The heat absorbed at the upper temperature T2 , and the heat rejected at
the lower temperature T1 , are
Q2 = N kT2 ln(V2 /V1 )
Q1 = N kT1 ln(V3 /V4 )
Because 23 and 12 lie on adiabatic lines, we have
V2 T21 = V3 T11
V1 T21 = V4 T11
Dividing one equation by the other yields V2 /V1 = V3 /V4 .
The eciency of the cycle is therefore
=1
Q1
T1
=1
Q2
T2
2.8
Diesel cycle:
Q2 = CP (T3 T2 )
Q1 = CV (T4 T1 )
= 1 (Q1 /Q2 ) = 1 1 [(T4 T1 )/(T3 T2 )]
We have P3 = P2 , hence
T3 /T2 = V3 /V2 = rc
The processes 12 and 34 are adiabatic, with T V 1 = constant. V4 = V1 .
Thus
CHAPTER 2.
T3 V31 = T4 V11
T2 V21 = T1 V11
Using the three relations derived, we obtain
=1
1
rc 1
r1 (rc 1)
2.9
Otto cycle:
Q2 = CV (T3 T2 )
Q1 = CV (T4 T1 )
= 1 (Q1 /Q2 ) = 1 [(T4 T1 )/(T3 T2 )]
The processes 12 and 34 are adiabatic, with T V 1 = constant. We have
V4 = V1 , V3 = V2 Thus
T1 V11 = T2 V21 .
T3 V21 = T4 V11 .
Taking the ratio of these equations, we have
T2 /T1 = T3 /T4 = r1 .
Thus
= 1 r1
2.10
First note Tb /Ta = Vb /Va = 2.
ab
bc
ca
Work done
Pa (Vb Va ) = Pa Va = N kTa
0 R
P dV = N kTa ln 2
Heat absorbed
CP T = CP Ta
CV Ta
N kTa ln 2
W
2
= (1 ln 2) = 0.12
Q2
5
A
B
C
D
P
P1
2P1
2P1
P1
V
V1 = N kT1 /P1
2V1
V1
2V1
T
T1
4T1
2T1
2T1
9
(a)
Heat supplied along
ACB : CV T1 + CP (2T1 ) = 32 + 5 N kB T1 = 13
2 N kB T1 .
ADB : CP T1 + CV (2T1 ) = 52 + 3 N kB T1 = 11
2 N kB T1 .
AB : U + W = 32 N kB (2T1 ) + 32 P1 V1 = 6N kB T1 .
(b)
Heat capacity = Q/T = 6N kB T1 /3T1 = 2N kB .
(c)
Work done = P1 V1 = N kB T1 . Heat absorbed = Heat absorbed along ACB
= (13/2)N kB T1 .
2
=
13
2.12
(a)
Since no work is being done, and the temperatures diverge, heat must be
transferred from the colder body to the hotter body, with no other eect, and
this violates the Clausius statement of the second law.
(b)
The assertion is not true for physical black bodies, because they cannot be
point-like but have finite size. Even if the two bodies have identical shapes,
their optical images are not reciprocal. That is, the radiation from one body
may form an image that is larger than the other body, and thus not completely
absorbed by the other body.
10
CHAPTER 2.
Chapter 3
3.1
(a)
For a adiabatic process dS = 0, and the T dS equations give
CV dT = (T /T )dV
CP dT = T V dP
Dividing one by the other, we obtain
CP /CV = T [V (P/V )S ] = T /S
(b)
CV dT + (T /T )dV = CP dT T V dP T. Put
dT = (T /P )V dP + (T /V )P dV .
Equate the coecients of dP and dV on both sides. One of them gives
CP CV = (T V /T )(V /T )P = 2 T V /T .
(c)
Using U = A + T S, H = G + T S (enthalpy), we have
CV
CP
3.2
The Sacker-Tetrode equation is
p
S = N kB [(5/2) ln(n3 )], where n = N/V , and = 2~2 /mkB T .
(a)
A = U T S = (3/2)k
/ B T T S = N kB T ln(n3 ) N kB T.
G = A + P V = N kB T ln(n3 ).
(b)
Write ln(n3 ) = ln n + ln 3 . The second term is a function of T only.
= (A/N )V,T = kB T ln(n3 )+N kB T ( ln n/N )V,T kB T = kB T ln(n3 ).
= (G/N )P,T = kB T ln(n3 ) + N kB T ( ln n/N )P,T = kB T ln(n3 ).
11
12
CHAPTER 3.
3.3
The force on the bead is (P Pa )A mg, where
P = pressure in gas,
Pa = 1 atm.
The equation of motion for the displacement x is m
x =(P Pa )A mg.
In equilibrium the pressure in the gas is P0 = Pa + (mg/A).
The volume is V0 = RT /P0 .
Assume adiabatic oscillations: P V = const.
This implies dP = (P/V )dV (P0 /V0 )Ax.
P = P0 + dP P0 (P0 /V0 )Ax.
Thus m
x + A2 P02 /RT x = 0.
The frequency of oscillations is
p
= AP0 /RT
3.4
Let the equilibrium pressure and temperature be P0 , T0 . Under an infinitesimal displacement x, suppose the pressure of compartment 1 changes by
dP . Since the process is adiabatic, we have P V = constant, or (dP/P ) +
(dV /V ) = 0. In terms of the temperature, we have T V 1 = constant, or
(dT /T ) + ( 1)(dV /V ) = 0.
(a)
For compartment 1, we have to first order
P0 x
L
( 1)T0 x
dT =
L
dP =
(c)
Due to the finite thermal conductivity of the piston, heat flows back and
forth between the two compartment, because of the oscillation in the temperature dierence.Assume that the temperatures change so slowly that at any
moment we regard heat conduction as taking place between two heat reservoirs
of fixed temperatures. When an amount of heat dQ flows from 1 to 2, the
entropy increase is dS = (dQ/T2 ) (dQ/T1 ). Thus
dS
=
dt
1
1
T2 T1
dQ
kB (T )2
kB
=
dt
T1 T2
T
T0
13
The temperature dierence is
(T )2 = (T1 T2 )2 = (2dT )2 =
Hence
4( 1)2 T02 x2
L2
dS
= ax2
dt
A
V
= a0 (v0 v)
(b)
T = v 1 (v/P )T = (a0 v)1
= v 1 (v/T )P = v 1 (P/T )V (v/P )T , by chain rule.
=
1 da0
a0 v dT
= a0 (v02 v 2 ) f
(c)
=
A
N
V,T
3.6
For this problem it is important to use the entropy expression with arbitrary
CV , instead of setting it to (3/2)kB . Write the adiabatic condition as
S = S1 + S2 = 0, or
(N1 + N2 )kB ln(Vf /Vi ) + (N1 CV 1 + N2 CV 2 ) ln(Tf /Ti ) = 0.
Thus, Tf /Ti = (Vi /Vf ) ,where = kB (N1 + N2 )/(N1 CV 1 + N2 CV 2 ).
This means T V = constant. Putting T = P V /N kB T , where N = N1 +N2 T,
we have
P V = constant
where
= +1=
n1 CP 1 + n2 CP 2
N1 (CV 1 + kB ) + N2 (CV 2 + kB )
=
N1 CV 1 + N2 CV 2
n1 CV 1 + n2 CV 2
14
CHAPTER 3.
3.7
(a)
Since the disks are thin, we can assume that their temperatures always
remain uniform.
Let the final temperature be T .
The changes in temperatures are respectively T1 = T T1 , T2 = T T2 .
For simplicity write CP 1 = C1 , CP 2 = C2 .
The amounts of heat absorbed are respectively Q1 = C1 T1 , Q2 =
C2 T2 .
Since the system is isolated Q1 + Q2 = 0. This gives
T =
C1 T1 + C2 T2
C1 + C2
(b)
Consider the instant when the two temperatures are T20 , T10 , (T20 > T10 ).
When an amount of heat dQ flows from 2 to 1, the entropy increase is
dS = (dQ/T10 ) (dQ/T20 ).
We can express dQ in terms of the dT through dQ = C1 dT10 = C2 dT20 .
Thus we can rewrite dS = C1 (dT10 /T10 ) + C2 (dT20 /T20 ).
S = C1
T1
dT10
+ C2
T10
T2
T
T
dT20
= C1 ln
+ C2 ln
0
T2
T1
T2
3.8
The relations are straightforward mappings from a P V system to a magnetic
system.
3.9
(a)
The desired expression are straightforward mappings of those for a P V system.
(b)
The first relation is the condition that dA be an exact dierential. The
second is obtained by using the equation of state M = H/T .
(c)
The chain rule states (T /H)S (H/S)T (S/T )H = 1.
From (b) we have (H/S)T = T 2 /(H).
By definition, the heat absorbed at constant H is given by T dS = CH dT .
Thus (S/T )H = CH /T.
3.10
(a)
The important property to verify is that at constant T the entropy decreases
as the magnetic field H increases.
(b)
15
Isothermal magnetization: dT = 0.
The heat absorbed is
dQ = CM dT HdM = HdM . Therefore
Q =
HdM =
H 2
2T0
(c)
Adiabatic cooling: dQ = 0.
From dQ = CM dT HdM
we obtain
3 H 2
2aT02
This becomes negative when the magnetic field H is suciently large. However,
the equation becomes invalid long before that happens, for it is based on Curies
law, which is valid only for weak fields.
16
CHAPTER 3.
Chapter 4
4.1
The system is in contact with a heat reservoir, but initially not in equilibrium
with it. Let the stages of the process be labeled A,B,C:. We first calculate the
heat absorbed Q, and the entropy change S of the system.
(A) Water cools from 20 C to 0 C.
Q = RCP T = 10 R 4180 20 J = 8.36 105 J.
S = dQ/T = CP dT /T = CP ln(Tf /Ti ) = 41800 ln(273/293) = 2.96
103 J/deg.
(B) Solidification at 0 C.
Q = 10 3.34 105 J =.3.34 106 J.
S = Q/T = 3.34 106 /273 = 1.22 104 J/deg.
(C) Ice cools from 0 C to -10 C.
Q = CP0 T = 10 2090 10 J = 2.09 105 J.
S = CP0 ln(Tf /Ti ) = 20900 ln(263/273) = 7.80 102 J/deg.
Total heat absorbed by system: Qsys = 4.39 106 J
Total entropy change of system: Ssys = 1.39 104 J/deg.
The reservoir has a fixed temperature T0 = 10 C..
The total heat absorbed by reservoir equals that rejected by the system:
Qres = 4.39 106 J.
Entropy change of reservoir:
Sres = Qres /T0 = 4.39 106 /263 = 1.67 104 J/deg.
Suniverse = Sres + Sres = 2.8 103 J/deg
4.2
Let P0 , T0 be the pressure and absolute temperature at the triple point. Let
L be the extensive latent heat (not specific latent heat.) Since the solid-gas
17
18
CHAPTER 4.
Lvap
T0
1
P = P0 exp
N kB T0
T
Melting: dP/dT = Lvap /T V.
P = P0 +
Lmelt
T
ln
V
T0
Lvap + Lmelt
T0
P = P0 exp
1
N kB T0
T
4.3
dP/dT = /T v = [1.44 J/(18 20)cm3 ]T 1 .
dT /dP = c0 T , where c0 = 1.39 cm3 /J.
4.4
(a)
At a given v > v0 , the dashed line lies at a lower free energy than the
solid line. The latter represents a stretched that fills the whole volume. The
former represent a liquid drop at specific volume v0 that does not fill up the
entire volume. This is therefore the preferred state of the liquid. At v = v0 the
pressure is zero.
(b)
Now assume that the liquid coexists with its vapor, treated as an ideal gas.
We are in the transition region of a first-order phase transition. At the given
temperature, the liquid and gas have fixed densities, which must be consistent
with the requirement of equal pressure P and chemical potential . Denote
quantities for the liquid with subscript 1, and those for the vapor with subscript
2:
P1 = a0 (v0 v),
1 = a0 (v02 v 2 ) f,
P2 = nkB T,
2 = kB T ln(n3 ).
where
p P1 , 1 were obtained in Prob.3.5, and 2 was given in Prob.3.2, with
= 2~2 /mkB T . Thus, the conditions determining v and n are
a0 (v0 v) = nkB T
a0 (v02 v 2 ) f = kB T ln(n3 )
19
From the first equation, we see that v0 v > 0. It approaches zero as nT 0.
(c)
Small n corresponds to (v0 v) 0. The second equation becomes f
kB T ln(n3 ). Thus
n3 exp(f /kB T )
4.5
(a)
dP/dT = /[T (v2 v1 )] /T v2 = /[T (kB T /P )]. Hence
T dP
=
P dT
kB T
(b)
T (K)
0.2
0.4
0.6
0.8
1.0
1.2
(ergs/g)
8.21107
9.37
10.5
11.8
13.1
14.4
4.6
R
The accompanying sketch shows G = V dP . The system skips the closed
loop in the graph of G, because it is higher than need be
V
A
A
P
G
20
CHAPTER 4.
4.7
(a)
A(V, T ) = RT ln(V b) (a/V ) + f (T )
As V , A(V, T ) RT ln V + f (T )
This should approach the ideal gas result (Prob.3.2) RT [ln(n3 ) 1].
Therefore, up to an additive constant,
3
f (T ) = RT 1 + ln T
2
(b)
CV = T (d2 f /dt2 ) = (3/2)R, which is a constant.
4.8
T dS = CV dT + T (P/T )V dV = 0.
dT /dV = (T /CV ) (P/T )V = (RT /CV )(V b)1 .
Integrating this yields
ln T = (R/CV ) ln(V b)+ constant.
Thus the adiabatic condition is
T (V b)R/CV = constant
V
T
P
= 1
T P P V V T
This gives
P
T
(V /T )P
1 2
=
(V /P )T
T 1 T 2
21
If the transition line refers to a second-order phase transition, then across this
line V = 0, while the dierences in and are nonzero. Thus
dP
=
dT
T
22
CHAPTER 4.
Chapter 5
5.1
n = 2.70 1019 atoms /cm3
v = 2 105 cm/s.
N = nv/6 1024 s1 cm2 .
5.2
Let tV0 be the volume of the room, and V be the volume under consideration
The probability of finding an atom in V is V /V0 .
The probability of finding it elsewhere is 1 (V /V0 ).
Since there are N independent atoms, the probability of finding none in V
is
V
V
= exp N ln 1
p= 1
V0
V0
For small V /V0 we can use the expansion ln (1 (V /V0 )) V /V0 . Thus
p exp(N V /V0 )
Under STP,
N=
V0
(6.02 1023 mole1 )
22.4 liter mole1
for V
for V
= 1 A3 :
19
p exp 2.7 1019 1010
5.3
Let n = N/V
Probability of finding one atom in dV = ndV.
Probability of finding no atom in dV = 1 ndV.
Probability of finding no atom in V = exp(nV ).
23
24
CHAPTER 5.
4
2
3
p(r) = 4nr exp nr
3
5.4
For the beam to remain well-collimated, the atoms should suer no scattering
by the air in the chamber along the flight path of length L. The condition is
therefore > L, where (n)1 is the mean-free-path, where n is the density
of the air, and is the cross section for a collision between atoms in the beam
with an air molecule. Thus
1
n<
L
For a rough estimate, take 1016 cm2 . This gives n < 1015 cm3 . The
estimate can be refined by using a more precise value for .
5.5
(a)
The mass density of water is 1 g cm3 . This corresponds to a number density
n = 2 1023 cm3 . Thus = 5 1016 cm.
(b)
The rate of reaction is R = N I, where N is the number of nucleons, I is
the neutrino flux, and is the reaction cross section. A person of mass 150,kg
contains N = 1029 nucleons. Thus R = 5 1010 s1 .
The collision time is = R1 = 2 109 s 70 yrs.
Thus, one gets hit by a neutrino about once in a lifetime.
5.6
Following the hint, the answer is obtained straightforwardly:
Cn =
2n/2
n n n
n
n
ln ln +
n
2
2 2
2
2 +1
5.7
(a)
From (5.37), (E, V ) = (/E), where
Z
N
=V
dp1 dpn
p21 +...+p2n <E
with n = 3N . Thus
(E, V ) = K0 V n n
E = K0 V n nCn E (n1)/2
25
(b) Using S = kB ln , we have, up to an additive constant,
ln N
S(E)
ln C3N
3/2
= ln V +
+O
+ ln E
N kB
N
N
ln
N
= ln V E 3/2 + O
N
5.8
(a)
By the same reasoning as in the last problem, we obtain (E, V ) = K0 n
E ,
where n = 6N . There is no volume dependence in the limit V , because
the particles are confined by the harmonic oscillator potential.
(b) Transcribing the result of the last problem, we have
S(E)
ln N
3
= ln E + O
N kB
N
5.9
Let the mean-free-path be 105 cm. To be away from the origin by a
distance L, a total of (L/)2 random steps would have to be taken. Since each
2
step lasts a collision time 1010 s, the total time required is (L/) . For
L = 1 cm the time is:1 sec. For L = 1 m the time is 104 sec.
5.10
1/2
For one coordinate, the probability of return after n collisions is (2n)
,
according to (5.16). For the N -particle state to recur, all 6N coordinates have
to return at the same time. When this happens, dierent particles woud have
made dierent numbers of collisons n. For our order-of-magnitude estimate, we
can imagine that all particles have made an average numbers of collisions n
,
1/2
each with probability p = (2
n)
which is a small but finite number. The
probability for gas as a whole to return to the initial state is then p6N . That is,
1
Recurrence time exp 6N ln
p
in units of the collision time. For N 1019 , this number is of order exp 1020 ,
which is so large that neither the value of p nor the units used makes any
significant dierence.
26
CHAPTER 5.
Chapter 6
6.1
Let = (2mkB T )1 .
R
R 3
d p f (p)
3
1 0 dpp4 exp(p2 )
R
h i= R 3
= kB T
=
2m 0 dpp2 exp(p2 )
2
d p f (p)
R
R 3 2
2
d p f (p)
15
1 0 dpp6 exp(p2 )
R
=
= R 3
=
(kB T )2
2
2
2
4m 0 dpp exp(p )
4
d p f (p)
2
3
h i2 = (kB T )2
2
6.2
The energy distribution is defined through P (E)dE = f (p)4p2 dp, where
f (p) is the Maxwell-Boltzmann distribution of momentum. Using E = p2 /2m,
we obtain
P (E) = c0 EeE/kB T
where c0 = n1/2 (kB T )3/2 .
6.3
The density is obtained by integrating the distribution function over the
momentum. The result is
n(z) = n(0)emgz/kB T
6.4
Using the equation of state of the ideal gas, we obtain P (1)/ T = C0 .After
some manipulation this leads to
dP
dT
mg
dT
=
dz =
P
1 T
kB T
1 T
27
28
CHAPTER 6.
1
dT
=
mg
dz
1
mgz
/(1)
1 mgz
1
kB T0
6.5
There is an eective temperature-dependent potential U (x), given through
exp(U/kB T ) = c0 (1 + x).
6.6
The answer is
n1 (r)
= exp 2 r2 (m1 m2 )/2kB T
n2 (r)
6.7
(a)
The most probable velocity is that at the maximum of the speed distribution.
This will be obtained in (c).
(b)
The pressure is given by
Z
1
p2
d p2px vx f (p) =
f (p)
d3 p p
P =
3
p2 + m2
px >0
p
where we have used vx = px / p2 + m2 . Write
Z
p
p2
m2
p
= p2 + m2 p
p2 + m2
p2 + m2
29
The second can be neglected in theRultra-relativistic
limit p2 m2 . Comparing
p
3
2
2
P with the energy density U/V = d p p + m f (p), we obtain
PV
1
U
3
(c)
The velocity distribution f (v) is defined by
p
f (v)d3 v = C exp mv/ 1 v 2 d3 p
Cm3
m
f (v) =
exp
(1 v 2 )5/2
kB T 1 v 2
c
mc2
2
mc2
v0
(kB T mc2 )
1
c
5kB T
(d)
Relativistic eects become noticeable when kB T /mc2 is appreciable, say, at
10%. For H2 this corresponds to kB T = 0.1 2 GeV, or T = 2 1012 K.
6.8
(a)
mc2
2kB T f0
2
exp
(f
f
)
P (f ) =
0
mc2
2kB T f02
(b)
The variance is
(f f0 )2 =
R
0
2
2
df (f f0 ) exp (f f0 )
R
2
df
exp
(f
f
)
0
0
30
CHAPTER 6.
of integration
to = (f f0 ).
where = mc2 /(2kB T f02 ). Change the variable
p
The lower limit of integration becomes f0 = mc2 /2kB T . This can be
replaced by when kB T mc2 , which is true in usual laboratory conditions.
We then obtain
kB T 2
(f f0 )2 =
f
mc2 0
(c)
The line width
is given by the square root of the variance, and thus inversely
proportionalpto m. The H2 line width is therefore broader than that of O2
by a factor 32/2 = 4.
6.9
(a)
f (p) ecp ,
U/N = c
p = 3kB T,
CV = 3N kB .
(b)
P V = 13 U = N kB T.
6.10
Follow the hints and directions given in the problem.
6.11
W
d pvx f (p) = C
vx >v0
= n
p2x
dpx vx e
mv0
v02
kB T
exp
2m
2mkB T
2
2
dpy exp py
6.12
p
104 m/s. This is to be compared
(a) The escape velocity is vc = 2GM/R p
with the most probable speed at STP v0 = 2kB T /m 2.2 103 m/s. The
fraction of gas that can escape is
Z
Z
2
C
4
2 p2 /2mkB T
f=
dp4p e
=
dxx2 ex
n mvc
y
where C = n(2mkB T )3/2 and y = vc /v0 . Using the results of Prob.6.10(b),
we obtain
2
2y
f ey
31
The time it takes for an atom to go from sea level to the top of the atmosphere
through random collisions is
t
L2
= 3 1011 s 104 yr
vc
N
E
= 4V
= 4V
p0
Z
dpp2 f (p)
dpp2
p0
p2
f (p)
2m
= 2y 1/2 ey
=
4 3/2 y
y e
3
2
E
N
T
1/2
=
2y
y 1 ey
T
E
N
3
Taking the logarithm of the equation for N/N,we have ln(N/N ) = y
ln(2y 1/2 ), which gives
T
4 N
T
3 N
ln
N
N
32
CHAPTER 6.
6.14
(a)
Let the axis along the needle be labeled 1, and a perpendicular axis 2.
The moments of inertia about these axes are I1 , I2 , with I2 I1 . By the
equipartition of energy we have
J12
J2
kB T
= 2 =
2I1
2I2
2
where Ji is the components of angular momentum along the axis i. Thus
r
I2
J2
=
1
J1
I1
That is, the angular momentum is nearly parallel to the axis of the needle.
(b)
The equipartition of energy states
1
1
CV 2 = kB T
2
2
This gives
p
V 2 = 6.5 V .
6.15
(a)
Take 1 mole of N2 . The mass is 28 g.
For v = 7 km/s, the kinetic energy is
K.E. = 12 M v 2 = 0.5(0.028)(7000)2 = 686 kJ.
When this energy is converted into heat, the temperature rise is of the order
of
T =K.E./kB = 5500 K.
Thus, the astronauts would be fried.
(b)
A constant deceleration a is equivalent to the application of a potential mxa,
where x is the distance, and m is the mass of an air molecule. The Boltzmann
factor gives a relative density distribution
n
mxa
= exp
n
kB T
which equals the fractional change in pressure P/P at constant temperature.
The dierence in pressure between the points x = 0 and x = L is therefore
P = P0 [(1 exp(mxL/kB T )].
(c)
Let the total mass of air be M = N a, where N is the total number of air
molecules. The force is
F = AP =
AP0 maL
P0 V
=
N ma = N ma = M a
kB T
N kB T
33
The stopping time is t = v/a, which corresponds to a distance
The work done is therefore
W =
1 2
2 at
= v 2 /2a.
1
F v2
= M v2
2a
2
34
CHAPTER 6.
Chapter 7
7.1
R
Particle flux : IN = vx >0 d3 pvx f (p)
R
Energy flux: IE = vx >0 d3 pvx f (p)mv 2 /2
Average energy of an escaped particle
R
IE
m 0 dvv 5 exp mv 2 /2kB T
R
=
= 2kB T
IN
2 0 dvv 3 exp (mv 2 /2kB T )
n1
n2
=
k
n1
n2
m2
m1
k/2
2 ln (n1 /n2 )0
2 ln (99.27/0.75)
=
= 775
ln (m1 /m2 )
ln (238/235)
7.3
In an adiabatic process P V = constant. Using the equation of state, we
find that P (N kB T /P ) = constant, or P 1 T = constant. Dierentiating this
relation with respect to P we obtain
T
1T
=
P S
P
35
36
CHAPTER 7.
n
1
=
P S
kB T
Hence
1
nkB T
r
kB T
c =
m
7.4
Test the condition K/c CP . Using the data given, we find K/c = 1.44
105 , CP = 0.24T, in the mixed unit given. Thus the condition is well-fulfilled,
and shows that sound propagated adiabatically.
7.5
From (7.19) 2 /t2 + u/t = 0. Instead of the Euler equation
u/t = P , use the Navier-Stokes equation.(7.48). Then in first-order
approximation (7.21) is replaced by
. 2
4 2
2 P +
( u) =0
2
t
3
where is the viscosity. Use the continuity equation u = /t, and
convert 2 P to 2 as in (7.22). The result is
1
4 2
. 2
2 2
=0
t2
c
3
t
For a sinusoidal wave = 0 + 1 exp(ikx it), the last term is i(4k/30 )1 .
Thus the damping coecient is 4k/30 .
7.6
The one-dimensional diusion equation has solution
x2
N
exp
n(x, t) =
4Dt
4Dt
The gas is characterized by the diusion constant D. Suppose the detector has
spatial resolution x. We want to find the time t at which n(L, t)x = 1. That
leads to the implicit equation
t=
1
L2
4D ln N x/4Dt
37
In the first approximation, we put t = L2 /4D on the right side. This gives
t=
1
L2
4D ln (N x/L)
1/4
RW
T1 =
3
In the interior, the rate of heat generation per unit volume is W , and this
equals q, where q is the heat flux vector. Using q = T , we have the
equation for the temperature distribution 2 T = W/. Assuming that T is
spherically symmetric, and using spherical coordinates, we obtain
d 2 dT (r)
W 2
r
=
r
dr
dr
W 2
r
6
W 2
R
6
Thus
1
T0 = W R2 +
6
RW
3
1/4
38
CHAPTER 7.
7.9
(a)
The heat absorbed by per unit volume is dQ = qdt, which defines the
heat flux vector q. Putting dQ = T ds, we have
s
1
+ q=0
t
T
(b)
Consider the heat flux due to heat conduction q = T. Write (q)/T =
(q/T ) q (1/T ). The last equation can be rewritten
q
s
= +
t
T
T
T
The second term, which is always positive, is the rate of irreversible entropy
production.
7.10
Suppose the thickness of the ice sheet is x. Consider a unit square of the ice
sheet. The mass of the sheet increases at the rate dx/dt, and generates heat
at the rate dx/dt. This must equal the heat flux, which we can represent as
qx =
T
x
Chapter 8
8.1
(a)
The number of ways to choose the n atoms to remove from N sites is
N !/ [n! (N n)!]
(b)
The number of ways to choose the n interstitials out of M is
M !/ [n! (M n)!]
(c)
The total energy is E = n.The phase space volume is
(n) =
N !M !
n! (N n)!n! (M n)!
N
S
n
M
n
= ln (n) = n ln
(N n) ln 1
+ n ln
(M n) ln 1
kB
n
N
n
M
The temperature is defined through
1 S
1 ln (n)
1
=
=
kB T
kB E
n
This gives
=
ln (n) = ln
kB T
n
N
M
1 + ln
1
n
n
(d)
The previous equation can be rewritten as
n2
= exp
(N n) (M n)
kB T
39
40
CHAPTER 8.
n
N M exp (/2kB T ) (kB T )
1
1
1
+
(kB T )
n
N
M
(e)
n
exp (/2kB T )
N
1
1
1
S
=
=
ln
kB T
2aN kB r
2a r(1 r)
where kB T is just a scale factor. The tension is never zero. It is minimum when
r = 1/2, and goes to infinity when the chain is fully stretched to the right
(r = 1) or to the left (r = 0).
In this model, temperature is not a relevant concept, since energy is irrelevant. The factor T in T dS is an arbitrary scale factor.
If we give each left-pointing link an energy , then the total energy would be
E = N = N (1r). The temperature would be given by T 1 = ln [r(1 r]],
apart from a scale factor
8.3
(a)
Assume that a link can be up or down independently. The partition function
is the product of the partition functions of the individual links. The possible
41
N
energies are 0 and mga. Thus QN = [1 + exp (mga)] . We have ignored the
fact that the energy of the nth link depends on its height, and therefore on the
states of the preceding links. We have also ignored is the restriction that the
links cannot go above the ceiling.
(b)
ln QN
N mga
=
exp (mga) + 1
The length of the chain is L = (N N 0 )a, where N 0 = U/(mga) is the number
of up links. Thus
Na
L=
1 + exp (mga)
(c)
Since U = mga[N (L/a)], the force constant is mg.
U =
8.4
(a)
The possible states are labeled by the number of open links n = 0, 1, 2, , N .
The energy with n open links is En = n. The partition function is
QN =
N
X
en =
n=0
1 e(N+1)
1 e
(b)
The average number of open links is
(N + 1) e(N +1)
1 ln QN
e
=
1 e
1 e(N +1)
The second term is negligible for large N. At low temperatures 1 we
have
n
e
n
=
8.5
(a)
There are 6 sites in each hexagon, but each site is shared by 3 hexagons.
Thus we can assign 2 sites to a hexagon. On the other hand, each hexagon is
associated with one interstitial site. Thus, in an infinite lattice, there are half
as many interstitial sites as lattice sites.
(b)
The entropy is given by
S
kB
vacancy
interstitial
N!
M !(N M )!
(N/2)!
M !(N/2 M )!
42
CHAPTER 8.
= {N ln N M ln M (N M ) ln(N M )} + {N N/2}
M
N
2M
N
(N M ) ln 1
M ln 1
= 2M ln
N
2
N
2M
(c)
From T 1 = S//E we obtain the relation
E
N
1
=
2
E
2E
1
1
e/kB T
N
N
This can be easily solved, but we only give the high- and low-temperature limits:
1/2
E
2 exp(/2kB T ) (kB T )
1/3
(kB T )
N
The above is equal to the average interstitial fraction M/N at a given temperature.
8.6
(a)
The partition function for N non-interacting particles is QN = QN
1 , where
Q1 is that for a single particle:
Q1 =
3
X
exp ( n ) = 2e(bx
cx/2)
+ e(bx
+cx)
n=1
x
=
(4kB T /c) 1 (4bkB T /c2 )
Since x
cannot be negative, the nontrivial root is acceptable only when T < Tc ,
where
c2
kB Tc =
4b
Examining the sign of Q001 shows that when T < Tc the nontrivial roots corresponds to a maximum, while x
= 0 corresponds to a minimum. For T > Tc , the
only solution is x
= 0, which corresponds to a maximum. Thus there is a phase
transition at T = Tc .
43
8.7
For a classical relativistic gas,
QN (V, T ) =
"
#
N p
X
d3N p d3N q
VN 1 N
exp
(cpi )2 + (mc2 )2 =
I ()
3N
N !h
N ! h3N
i=1
where
I() =
h p
i
d3 p exp (cp)2 + (mc2 )2
V
AN (V, T ) = N kB T ln
+
1
+
ln
I()
N h3
In the nonrelativistic limit kB T mc2 we have
Z
2
p2
3/2
I()
d3 p exp mc2 +
= emc /kB T (2mkB T )
2m
N
2
AN (V, T ) N mc + kB T ln
kB T
V
mc2 + kB T ln n3
3
Z
Z
kB T
3
cp
2 cp
I()
d pe
= 4
dp p e
= 8
c
0
"
!
#
3
2N
~c
AN (V, T ) N kB T ln
1
V
kB T
kB T ln nL3
where
L = 2/3
~c
kB T
8.8
The partition function is QN = N , where is the partition function for one
particle:
Z
X
2 2
2 2
V
V
=
e~ k /2m =
d3 ke~ k /2m = 3
3
(2)
k
p
44
CHAPTER 8.
8.9
(a)
The partition is QN = N , where
Z
Z
2 2
1
2kB T
p2 /2m
=
dpe
dqem q /2 =
(b)
The free energy is
A = kB T ln QN = N kB T ln
2kB T
Thus
S
U
CV
A
2kB T
=
= N kB 1 + ln
T
= A + T S = N kB T
U
=
+ N kB
T
8.10
(a)
N
QN = e0 B + e0 B
(b)
hM i =
e0 B e0 B
1
ln QN = 0 N B
B
e 0 + e0 B
(c)
2
1 2
420 N
2
ln
Q
=
M hM i = 2
N
2
B 2
(e0 B + e0 B )
Chapter 9
9.1
(a)
Q(z, T ) =
N0
X
N0
N=0
z N eN =
N0
X
N0
N0 N
= 1 + ze
ze
N
N =0
(b)
z
hN i
1
=
ln Q = 1
N0
N0 z
z e +1
(c)
N0
ln Q = 1
z e +1
2
N0 kB ( ) e
U
=
2
T
z (z 1 e + 1)
9.2
(a)
The grand partition function for the O2 lattice gas is
N
X
N
N 1 N1
z1 e
= 1 + z1 e 1
Q1 (z, T ) =
N1
N1 =0
46
CHAPTER 9.
= kB T ln
z1 (1 f )
0.37 eV
f
(b)
The grand partition function is now given by
Q(z, T ) =
N NN
X
X 1 N N N1
N1 2 N2
z1 e 1
z2 e
N2
N1
N1 =0 N2 =0
N
X
N N1
N 1 N1
=
z1 e
1 + z2 e 2
N1
N1 =0
N
= 1 + z1 e 1 + z2 e 2
z1 e 1
z1
hN1 i
ln Q =
=
N
N z1
! + z1 e 1 + z1 e
Set this to 0.1 and solve for
2.
With
2
= 0.55 eV
9.3
(a)
E(M ) = M
N
(M ) =
M
(b)
The grand partition function of the adsorbed gas is
N
X
N
N M
= 1 + ze
ze
Q(z, T ) =
M
M=0
N M
ln
ze
M ln ze + N ln N M ln M (N M ) ln (N M )
M
z
1
M
=
ln Q = 1
N
N z
z e
+1
47
(c)
M
3 P
=
N
e
+ 3 P
(d)
2 = z
M2 M
ze
z
ln Q =
2
z z
(e + z)
9.4
(a)
The equation of state is
1
8
3
V
P+ 2 = T
3
V
3
Dierentiating both sides with respect to P at constant T , we find
V
=
P
P+
3
V2
V 13
=
V63 V 13
V 13
8
6
1 2
3T V 3 V 3
1 V
1
V P
6 (T 1)
(b) The fractional density fluctuation near the critical point diverges:
T
1
n2 n
2
= T
n
2
V
6 (T 1)
9.5
48
CHAPTER 9.
9.6
(a)
Let Ni be the number of molecules of type Xi present. The reaction consumes i molecules of type Xi . Thus the change in Ni is proportional to i , with
the same proportionality constant for all i. Hence N = Ni / i is independent
of i.
(b)
Minimizing the free energy, we have
0 = A =
X A
X
Ni =
i i N = 0
Ni
i
i
P
Since N is arbitrary, we have i i i = 0.
9.7
(a)
In a fixed volume, the densities obey the relations
n3
n1
= n2 =
2
2
Hence A = n1 2n2 and B = n1 + n3 remain constant.
(b)
The chemical
3/2
where K0 = (4/9)3 mkB T /~2
. Two other conditions are
n1 + n3
n1
= n0
= 2n2
These imply
n31 = 2K0 (n0 n1 )
High-temperature limit K0 :
r
n0
n1 n0 1
2K0
Low-temperature limit K0 0
1/3
n1 (2K0 n0 )
9.8
49
The density depends on the power series
y=
bz
=1
To
!2
!3
P
X
X
bz
=1
P
= 1 + a2
bz
+ a3
bz
+
=1 b z
=1
=1
z + b2 z 2 + b3 z 3 +
i
h
2
= b2
= 4b22 2b3
50
CHAPTER 9.
Chapter 10
10.1
The energy residing in a mode of frequency of the transmission line is
~
~
~
T
1
E = ~
k
=
B
e
1
2kB T
~ + 1 (~)2 +
2
The second term above gives the first quantum correction. As a estimate use
the fundamental mode = c/L, where c is the velocity of light, and L the
length of the transmission line. The Nyquist theorem becomes
~c
V 2 = 4kB T R 1
2LkB T
For L = 1 mm, the correction amounts to approximately 1% at T = 300 K.
10.2
The accompanying sketch illustrates the construction that would lead to a
fractal of dimension 2.
(a) Start with a straight line of unit length.
(b) Halve the step size, and double the path length by taking more steps.
The way to do this is not unique. Pick one of the ways.
(c) In the next iteration, each previous segment is independently replaced
by a path of twice the length with half the step size.The path length L depends
on the step size according to L 1D , with D = 2.
51
52
CHAPTER 10.
10.3
Ignoring the possibility that two suspended particles collide with each another, we can regard the suspension as an ideal gas in equilibrium with. the
medium, which acts as a heat reservoir. Therefore its partial pressure obeys
the ideal gas law.
10.4
It is straightforward to show that
1
n(x, t) =
exp x2 /4Dt
4Dt
0 (x 6= 0)
n(x, t)
(x 0)
t0
and, for all t 6= 0,
Therefore
dxn(x, t) = 1
n(x, t) (x)
t0
10.5
(a)
For the Brownian particles: D = 4 109 cm2 /s.
For O2 : D 0.1cm2 /s
q
e =
8.32 106
= 1.18 1016 cgs (Modern value:1.381 1016 )
7.05 1023
2.9 1014
= 4.14 1010 cgs (Modern value: 4.803 1010 )
7.05 1023
10.7
(a)
Substitute j = Dn, into the continuity equation j + n/t = 0 to
obtain
n
D2 n +
=0
t
53
(b)
With a drift current produced by a uniform constant external force Fext ,
The total particle current is
j = Dn +
n
Fext
t
(c)
The absorption,contributes a term V (r)n to the rate of change of the particle density. From this point of view, the Schrodinger equation describes a
diusion in imaginary time, with absorption, of the wave function . What
makes quantum mechanics distinctive is that is a complex probability amplitude, and not a probability.
54
CHAPTER 10.
Chapter 11
11.1
If the showers are distributed at random, the probability that one occurred
on Tuesday would be 1/7, and the probability that it did not occur would be
6/7. The probability that none of the 12 showers occur on Tuesday would be
(6/7)12 = 0.157. Better bring the umbrella.
11.2
If parking tickets were issued at random, the probability of getting 12 tickets
on two days of the week would be (2/7)12 = 3 107 . This is so small that we
must reject the assumption that tickets were given out at random, and advise
the student to use a parking lot on those days. Of course, this assumes that the
police maintains the same tactic.
11.3
What determines whether the man goes north or south is the correlation
between northbound and southbound trains, as illustrated in the sketch. If he
enters the station during the interval x, he goes north. Otherwise he goes south.
Since he went north 70% of the time, we conclude x = 0.7.
11.4
Generate a sequence of random number between 0 an 1. Divide the interval
(0,1) into say 10 equal bins, and keep a running score of the number of random
numbers in each bin, as they are being generated. At the end of the run, plot
55
56
CHAPTER 11.
a histogram of the numbers in each bin. If the sequence is truly random, the
histogram should fit a Poisson distribution..
11.5
The current-voltage characteristic of the device is shown in the accompanying sketch.
Let the probability of finding the voltage to have a value between V and
V + dV be P (V )dV.
Let the probability of finding the current to have a value between I and
I + dI be Q(I)dI.
The current is never negative. So Q(I) = 0 for I < 0. For I > 0, we have
Q(I) = P (V )
where
dV
V0
= P (V )
dI
I + I0
I
V = V0 ln 1 +
I0
dIQ(I) =
(I > 0)
dV P (V )
V0
P (V ) I+I
+ (I) (I 0)
0
.
Q(I) =
0
(I < 0)
11.6
Let the probability density for y be Q(y). We have
Z x
Z y
dy 0 Q(y 0 ) =
dx0 P (x0 )
where x = y/b. The integrands on both sides are zero for negative arguments.
Thus
02
Z x
Z y
y
0
x
0
0
0x
dy Q(y ) =
dx
exp
= exp
1
a
2a
2ab
0
0
Dierentiating this gives
57
Q(y) =
11.7
Solution provided in text.
y
1
exp
2ab
2ab
(y 0)
58
CHAPTER 11.
Chapter 12
12.1
(a)
Z
d ei G( )
Z
i
=
d e
dtf (t)f (t + ) + 2()I 2
= f2 + 2()I 2
R
R
where I = dtf (t)I = dtf (t) by Campbells theorem (11.29)..
(b) R
f = 0 dtei t = (i )1 .
R
I = 0 dtet = /.
S() =
S() =
2 2
+
()
2 + 2
2
S() q + 2 2 q 2 ()
0
12.3
(a)
I(t) and I(t + ) are the same if there are an even number of sign changes
during and equal but opposite if there are an odd number of sign changes.
Thus
hI(t)I(t + )i = a2 (Peven Podd )
59
60
CHAPTER 12.
(b)
The probability that there are k crossing in the time interval > 0 is given
by the Poisson distribution
P (k; ) =
( )k
e
k!
The probability there are an even and odd number of crossings are given respectively by
!
( )2
( )4
Peven = e
1+
+
+
2!
4!
!
3
5
( )
( )
+
Podd = e
+
+
3!
5!
Thus for > 0
2
hI(t)I(t + )i = a e
( )2 ( )3
1 +
+
2!
3!
= a2 e2
S() =
d hI(t)I(t + )i = a2
= 2a2 Re
d ei =
12.4
From (12.2)
W3 (3, 1, 2) =
From (12.24) and (12.29)
d ei + a2
2a2
2 + 2
d ei +
dx4 W4 (3, 1, 4, 2)
61
12.5
The problem one faces in a computer simulation of a phase transition is
critical slowing down. It is easy to obtain a rough value for Tc , but very
dicult to attain precision. This is because on a finite lattice the transition
will not be sharp, but increasing the lattice size also increases the time to reach
thermal equilibrium. It becomes increasingly dicult for large blocks of spins
to flip, since all spins have to flip at the same time, by chance. Indeed, this
is why the largest block, namely the whole lattice, does not flip at all, leading
to spontaneous magnetication. To speed up the simulation, one has to improve
the algorithm by making trial flips of not just single spins, but blocks of spins
of random sizes.
12.6
(a)
Since the diusion equation is invariant under translations in space and time,
the solution (10.28) can be generalized to a starting position x0 and starting
time t0 by by replacing x, t by x x0 , t t0 , respectively.
(b)
Denote the transition probability from step i to step j by
!
1
(xi xj )2
P (i|j) = p
exp
4D(ti tj )
4D(ti tj )
To begin, show that for n = 2,
P (2|0) =
The right side is
1
p
X=
4D (t2 t1 ) (t1 t0 )
1
dx1 exp
4D
(x2 x1 )2 (x1 x0 )2
t2 t1
t1 t0
!!
1
x20
2B
A
x22
2
x1 +
x1
4D t2 t1 t1 t0
4D
A
where
A =
B
1
1
+
t2 t1
t1 t0
x2
x0
+
t2 t1
t1 t0
!!
p
2
2
4D/A
1
(x1 x0 )
B2
(x2 x1 )
p
exp
X =
4D
t2 t1
t1 t0
A
4D (t2 t1 ) (t1 t0 )
!
(x2 x0 )2
1
exp
= p
4D(t2 t0 )
4D(t2 t0 )
62
CHAPTER 12.
Next show that the result for n 1 implies that for n, where n > 2. The
integrals one has do is similar to the one above. This will complete the proof
by induction.
12.7
The instructions are fairly explicit.
Chapter 13
63
64
CHAPTER 13.
Chapter 14
14.l
p
The relativistic energy is E = (pc)2 + (mc2 )2 . In the ultra-relativistic domain we can neglect the mass term and thus E = pc. The deBroglie wavelength
is h/p = hc/E. The thermal wavelength is therefore proportional to hc/kB T .
14.2
14.3
U
CV
3
3
P V N kB T 1 25/2 n3
2
2
U
3
N kB 1 27/2 n3
T
2
n = z
65
exp ( ) = zQ
66
CHAPTER 14.
(b)
The internal energy per particle is defined by
P
U
exp ( )
= P
N
exp ( )
Thus,
ln Q
1 X
=
exp ( ) = U
(c)
Q =
exp
trans
rot
vib
1 U
= ctrans + crot + cvib
N T
U
N
cV
14.5
Qtrans
= V (2)3 4
U
N
= ln 3/2 / =
3
kB T
2
3
ctrans
=
kB
2
.
14.6
(a)
ln Qrot
U
N
ln 1 + exp ~2 /I exp ~2 /I
ln Qrot
~2
~2
=
=
exp
I
I
crot
3
kB
~2
I
~2
exp
I
(b)
Z
Qrot
U/N
kB T
d 2 exp ~2 2 /2I . 1
67
crot
1
kB
(c)
The internal energy rises exponentially from T = 0 to approach a linear
behavior. The qualitative behaviors are as shown in the accompanying sketch.
C
Urot
rot
kT
kT
h /I
14.7
(a)
Qvib
n=0
U
N
ln Qvib
~ e + 1
=
2 e 1
cvib
= e~
kB
(=~)
~
1 e~
Cvib
k
kT
h
(b)
1
1 e + 1
n+
=
ln Qvib =
2
2 e 1
*
2 +
2
1
1
2
e
n+
n+
=
ln Qvib =
2
2
2
2
(e 1)
where =~.
68
CHAPTER 14.
14.8
kB Tvib
kB Trot
~
~2
1
= ~ n +
2
2
1
= ~ n +
2
n
n
h i=
( n + b n ) e( n +bn )
P ( +b )
n
n
ne
h i
+ b 2 b~ 3 2
~
~
where = n
+ 1/2, and a bar denotes average with respect to the unperturbed
system with b = 0.
2 = 3 2
e2 + 6e + 1
2
4 (e 1)
2 e 3e + 4
= =
3
2 (e 1)
h i
e2 + 6e + 1 e 3e + 4
2
3
b~
4 (e 1)
2 (e 1)
The specific heat is obtained by dierentiating the above with respect to T.
Chapter 15
15.1
The cross section for a partially polarized beam is
pol = ||2 1 + ||2 2 = Tr ()
2
where || + || = 1. With respect to the present basis (i.e., the spin states 1
and 2) we have
2
||
1 0
0
=
=
2
0 2
0
||
The matrix trace is indepedent of the basis.
15.2
(a)
Qclassical =
dpdq H
1
=
e
(b)
Qquantum =
eEn =
n=0
dp exp p2 /2m
2
dq exp m 2 q 2 /2 =
1
e~/2
exp ~ n +
=
2
1 e~
n=0
(c)
Qquantum
1
2
=
~
h
69
70
CHAPTER 15.
15.3
Postulate the form
1
e(K+V ) = eK eV e 2
K V 2 X
Therefore
1 2 2
1 2 2
1 2
1 K + K
1 V + V
1 X
2
2
2
1 2 2
1 (K + V ) + K + V 2 + 2KV X
2
i
1 2h
2
1 (K + V ) + (K + V ) + KV V K X
2
X = KV V K = [K, V ]
15.4
(a)
N
QN = e0 B + e0 B
(b)
hM i =
e0 B e0 B
1
ln QN = 0 N B
B
e 0 + e0 B
(c)
2
1 2
420 N
2
ln QN =
M hM i = 2
2
2
B
(e0 B + e0 B )
15.5
(a)
Nb
Nf
N
z 1 e + 1
X
i
=
1
z e k +1
=
where k = ~2 k2 /2m.
(b)
The condition is Nb + Nf = N , or
1
1
f3/2 (z) = 1
+
z 1 e + 1 n3
71
p
where = 2~2 /mkT .
(c)
For small z, the condition becomes
ze + z/(n3 ) = 1
Thus
z = n3 1 n3 e
z = n3 1 n3 e
1 n3 e
For low temperatures we expect most particles to be in one of the bound states,
and thus nf /n 0.For , the condition for z becomes
zf3/2 (z) = n3 e
This means that z is small, so the condition reduces to z 2 = n3 e .Thus
1
nf
3 e
n
n
/2
15.6
hnk i =
1
Q
nk exp [ ( 1 n1 +
{n1 ,n2 , }
2 n2
1
hnk i =
p
1
Q
{n1 ,n2 , }
1
pQ
+ ) + ] =
with p 6= k, we obtain
nk np exp [ ( 1 n1 +
1
ln Q
k
2 n2
+ ) + ]
nk exp [ ( 1 n1 +
{n1 ,n2 , }
2 n2
+ ) + ]
1
does not depend on
We know that hnk i = z 1 e k 1
is zero, or
hnp nk i = hnp i hnk i (p 6= k)
p.
72
CHAPTER 15.
15.7
h 2 i hi2 =
XX
kG pG
Xh
kG
hn2k i hnk i
The last relation follows from the fact that terms with k 6= p do not contribute,
2
2
as shown in the last problem. By (15.35), hn2k i hnk i = hnk i hnk i . This
directly leads to the answer desired.
Chapter 16
16.1
The fraction of electrons that can excited is of the order of kB T / F . Hence
the eective density is nkB T / F , where n is the electron density. The meanfree-path iswhere is the collision cross section.
16.2
n = 4.35 1027 cm3
F = 24.6 MeV
Av. energy per nucleon =
3
5 F
nkB T
= 14.8 MeV
16.3
(a)
The Fermi wave number kF is given through (2s + 1)V (4/3)kF3 = N .
Thus, kF = [3n/4(2s + 1)]1/3.
pF
F
= ~kF
q
=
p2F c2 + m2 c4
(b)
where
(c)
|p|<pF
Z hp
i
(cp)2 + (mc2 )2 mc2
U = 2V
p
Z
Z
2
P = 2 px vx =
(p v)
3 p
p
d3 p/h3 .
73
74
CHAPTER 16.
For n1/3 << mc/~, particles near the Fermi surface are non-relativistic:
p
p2
(cp)2 + (mc2 )2 mc2 +
2m
U V
2
PV V
3
p2
2m
2
p2
= U
m
3
For n1/3 >> mc/~, particles near Fermi surface are ultra-relativistic:
p
(cp)2 + (mc2 )2 cp
U
PV
2V
2
V
3
cp
p
cp =
p
1
U
3
(d)
F
= 6 105 eV.
16.4
(a)
Let p be the Fermi momenta of the spin-up and spin-down gases. The
energy of an atom of up(down) spin is
(H) =
Thus
N =
p2
H
2m
V 4 3
4V
(2m)3/2 [ (H) H]3/2
p =
h3 3
3h3
(b)
For complete polarization, we have N = 0, hence (H) = H, and
N+ =
4V
(4mH)3/2
3h3
3 2
4
2/3
~2 n2/3
m
75
16.5
(a)
Consider a shell of thickness dr in the gas. Let the pressure dierential be
dP . The inward force acting on a patch of the shell of area dA is dAdP . In
hydrostatic equilibrium this must equal the gravitational attraction due to the
mass at the center. Thus
P dA = M (r)r2 dAdr
dP
M (r)
=
dr
r2
(b)
P =
Thus
2
n
5
n5/3 5/3
d
dr
= K 2
r
1/3
Assuming () = 0, we have
(r) =
C0
r3/2
16.6
(a)
Nb
=
=
Nf
N
z 1 e
X
k
+1
i
z 1 e k + 1
where k = ~2 k 2 /2m.
(b)
The condition is Nb + Nf = N , or
1
z 1 e
+1
p
where = 2~2 /mkB T .
(c)
For small z, the condition becomes
1
f3/2 (z) = 1
n3
ze + z/(n3 ) = 1
Thus
This is valid for n3 1.
z = n3 1 n3 e
76
CHAPTER 16.
(d)
For high temperatures 0. Thus n3 1, and z 1.
From Nf = (V /3 )f3/2 (z), or nf 3 = f3/2 (z), we obtain
nf 3
nf
n
z = n3 1 n3 e
1 n3 e
For low temperatures we expect most particles to be in one of the bound states,
and thus nf /n 0.For , the condition for z becomes
zf3/2 (z) = n3 e
This means that z is small, so the condition reduces to z 2 = n3 e .Thus
nf
1
3 e
n
n
/2
16.7
The probability of finding an electron with energy above the Fermi level
1
1
e + 1
16.8
(a)
The number of states in a volume element in momentum space is 2L2 dpx dpy /h2 .
The density of states is
2A
D(p) =
(2~)2
(b)
Obtain D( ) through D( )d = D(p)pdp:
D( ) =
(c)
N = 2 A/(2)2 kF2
kF
mA
2~2
2N
A
~2 N
mA
77
(d)
E=
d D( ) =
0
(e)
=
E
~2
=
A
2m
~2 N 2
2m A
N
A
(f)
In 3D D( )
, while in 2D D( ) is independent of . When the temperature increases from T = 0, the average energy increases like 0 + kB T , and hence
the density of states in 3D increases like kB T , whereas it remains constant in
2D. Thus we expect the chemical potential to be less sensitive to temperature
in the 2D case. That is, the temperature dependence is weaker.
78
CHAPTER 16.
Chapter 17
17.1
(a)
The operators p and q are hermitian, and defined by [p, q] = i~. Solving
for a and a , we have
a = (2~m)1/2 p i (m/2~)1/2 q
= (2~m)
which give
1/2
p + i (m/2~)
1/2
a, a = 1
We can write
p2
2m
1
m 2 q 2
2
1
~ a a + aa + a2 + a2
4
1
~ a a + aa a2 + a2
4
Hence
H
p2
1
1
+ m 2 q 2 = ~ a a + aa
2m 2
2
1
= ~ a a +
2
(b)
Define the eigenstate |ni by
a a|ni = n|ni
hn|ni = 1
The number hn|a a|ni is the norm of the state vector a|ni, and therefore
non-negative.
This means that the eigenvalues of a a cannot be negative.
79
80
CHAPTER 17.
Multiplying both sides of the first relation by a, we have
aa a|ni = na|ni
Using aa = a a + 1, we have
(a a + 1)a|ni = na|ni
(a a)a|ni = (n 1)a|ni
C= n
Similarly we can show
a |ni =
n + 1|n + 1i
17.2
(a)
The star is completed enclosed by the shell of dust cloud, which absorbs all
the radiation from the star. The dust cloud has two surfaces, an outer one and
an inner one, and we assume that they have approximately the same area.
Let the temperature of the star by T , and that of the dust cloud T 0 .
Let the power radiated by the star be R, and that of the dust cloud be R0
from each surface.
The net power outflow from the star is R R0 . The net influx is R0 . In
equilibrium R R0 = R0 . Hence the power radiated to the outside world is
R0 =
1
R
2
(b)
Since R T 4 , R0 T,4 we have T 0 /T = (R0 /R)1/4 = 21/4 .
17.3
We are ignoring heat generated due to radioactivity in the Earths interior.
(See Prob. 7.8.)
81
Let the subscripts S and E identify quantities relating respectively to the
Sun and Earth, which are separated by a distance L. The radiation per unit
surface area is T 4 . From the viewpoint of the Sun, the fractional solid angle
2
subtended by the Earth is RE
/(4L2 ). Thus the power received by the Earth
is
2
RE
TS4 (4RS2 )
4L2
2
This must equal the power radiated by the Earth TE4 (4RE
). Thus the radius
of the Earth drops out and we obtain
r
TE
RS
=
TS
2L
17.4
Energy flows into the house due to transmission of radiation originating
outside, and reflection of radiation originating inside. Thus the rate of inflow
is (1 r)T04 + rT 4 . The loss rate is (1 r)T 4 . In equilibrium we must have
(1 r)T04 + rT 4 = (1 r)T 4 .Thus
T
=
T0
1r
1 2r
1/4
17.5
From (8.61) S = T 1 (U + P V N ).
For photons = 0, P V = U/3. Thus
S=
4U
4
= V T 3
3T
3
K.
17.6
(a)
From (10.5) the photon density is n = (kT /~c)3 4000 cm3 for T = 2.73
(b)
From Prob.10.5, the entropy density at T = 2.73 K is S/V = k(4/45)(kT /~c)3 .
The entropy per photon is independent of the temperature:
S
4
=
k = 1.21k
N
45
where k is Boltzmanns constant.
(c)
When S = constant, T V 1/3 . .When the radius of the universe doubles,
the temperature drops by a factor 21/3 = 0.793.
82
CHAPTER 17.
17.7
(a)
There are 3N modes, each with energy ~ 0 .
U=
3N ~ 0
exp (~ 0 1)
(b)
2
CV = U/T 3N (~ 0 ) kT 2 exp (~ 0 )
(c)
A = 3N kT ln 1 e~0
17.8
(a)
(b)
The chemical potentials must be equal:
ln n3 = + 3kT ln 1 e~
(c)
P (T ) = nkT
17.9
(a)
The free energy is
A = + 3N kT ln 1 e~0
3n~ 0
=
V
exp (~ 0 ) 1
where n = N/V
(b)
V
= V0 +
=
where n0 = N/V0 .
3n~ 0
K [exp (~ 0 ) 1]
3kn~ 0
KT 2 [exp (~ 0 ) 1]2
83
17.10
(a)
The heat capacity of an electron gas is
CV
Nk
kTF
Thus
2 T
2 TF
~2 2 2/3
3 n
2m
a=
2
2TF
(b)
The Debye heat capacity for T TD is given by
CV
12 4
Nk
5
Thus
b=
T
TD
12 4
3
5TD
.
(c)
The plot is CV /nR vs. T 2 . Thus, the intercept at T 2 = 0 gives Ra, and the
slope of the line gives Rb. From the plot, a rough reading gives
Intercept
Slope
Thus
a = 6 103 K1
b = 2 106 K3
which lead to
TF
TD
= 820 K
= 490 K
p
= ak 2/3 , where a = ~ /.
Z
d2 k
U
=
A
(2)2 exp ( ) 1
84
CHAPTER 17.
where
U
C0 2/3
(kT )7/3
=
A
3~4/3
C0 =
dx
x4/3
= 1.68
ex 1
Chapter 18
18.1
In the transition P = kB T 3 g5/2 (1).Since this is proportional to T 5/2 , we
have dP/dT = 52 kB 3 g5/2 (1) The specific volume of the gas phase at transition
1
= T s0 .
18.2
Just above the transition z is slightly less than 1. Using the expansion
given in the problem we have
a b + c = 0
where
"
3
T Tc
g3/2 (1)
2
Tc
85
Tc
T
3/2 #
86
CHAPTER 18.
=c+
c2
b
This leads to the expansion
z = 1 c2
2a 3
c +
b
18.3
The parametric equation of state is
3 P
kB T
z3
z2
+
+
25/2 35/2
z2
z3
3 n = z + 3/2 + 3/2 +
2
3
= z+
= 23/2 , k3 =
1
4
33/2 . Thus
1
2
x3 + O(x4 )
= x 25/2 x2 +
8 9 3
which gives
a2
a3
= 25/2
1
2
=
8 9 3
18.4
Putting 3 = cT 3/2 ,we have
5/2
3
3
T g5/2 (z) (T > Tc )
U =
P V = V kB
T 5/2 g5/2 (1) (T < Tc )
2
2c
5 3/2
dz
U
3
g5/2 (z) + T 5/2 g3/2 (z) z1 dT
2T
CV =
= V kB
5 3/2
g5/2 (1)
T
2c
2T
(T > Tc )
(T < Tc )
87
We dierentiate the relation n3 = g3/2 (z) to obtain
3 n3
1 dz
=
z dT
2 T g1/2 (z)
which approaches zero when z 1, because g1/2 (z) . Thus CV is continuous at z = 1.
We use g1/2 (z) = z(d/dz)g3/2 (z) = dg3/2 (z)/d, where = ln z . From
Prob.11.2, we have the expansion near z = 1 :
g1/2 (z) = b0 1/2 + b1 +
where b0 = 1.7275, b1 = 1.460. Thus near z = 1, or = 0,we have
1 dz
d
3 nc 5/2
T
z dT
dT
2 b0
Dierentiate CV , and setting = 0, we obtain
3
N kB
d 1 dz
0
0
C+ C = N kB Tc
=
2
dT z dT
Tc
=0
where + and indicate approaching the limit from above and below, respectively, and
2
2
27 g3/2 (1)
27 2.612
=
=
= 3.86
16
b0
16 1.7275
18.5
(a)
Let = ~2 k2 /2m. The total number of particles is
N
N
V
=
=
1
z 1 e
k6=0
1
z 1 e
1
1
1
+ 3 g3/2 (z)
1
V z e
1
88
CHAPTER 18.
T
= c0
T0
kB T0
2 a
c0 =
= 0.881
3 g3/2 (1)
18.6
(a)
The internal energy due to phonons is
Z
2 V (kB T )4
~ck
4V
dkk2
=
U=
3
exp (~ck) 1
30 (~c)3
(2) 0
The heat capacity per unit mass is given by
Cphonon =
1 U
2 2 k 4
T3
=
mN T
15 (~c)3
1
U
dq(q + k0 )2 exp ~2 q 2 /2
2 e
V
2
2~2
r
k02 2 kT e/kB T
Croton
2~2 kB T 2
89
Using data for liquid helium
= 8.65 K
= 1.92 108 cm1
= 1.07 1024 g
/kB
k0
we obtain
Croton
387
8.65
3/2 exp
J g1 K1
T
T
387
8.65
exp
J g1 K1
T
T 3/2
where T is the absolute temperate in K. The numbers in this formula are based
on neutron scattering data independent of the specific heat. The following
plot compares this formula to data on specific heat shown as dots. It is
an absolute comparison with no adjustible parameters. At T =1 K, there is
already noticeable discrepancy, the main source of which probably comes the
approximations we used in the roton specific heat.
Spedic Heat ( J / g-deg )
0.1
0.08
0.06
0.04
0.02
0.5
0.6
0.7
0.8
0.9
T (K)
18.8
(a)
5/2
P1 = E0 /V = (3/5) N F /V = c1 ~2 /m n1 ,
2/3
/5.
c1 = 6 2
(b)
P2 = kB T 3 g5/2 (1) = c2 (m2 /~)3/2 (kB T )5/2 ,
=3/2
c2 = (2)
g5/2 (1).
(c)
90
CHAPTER 18.
kB T << F ,
2/3
kB T << ~2 /2m (3n1 /4) .
(d)
m1
=
m2
c2
c1
2/3
3
4
10/9
kB T
F
5/3
(e)
For Fermi degeneracy m1 /m2 << 1. For Bose degeneracy T < Tc . To fulfill
both conditions we must have
5/3
n1
m1
K
<
<< 1
n2
m2
where K is a numerical constant.
18.9
In 2D the fugacity z is determined by
Z
d2 k
1
N =A
2 z 1 exp(~k 2 /2m) 1
(2)
where A is the area of the system. By expending the right side in a power
series in z we obtain
1
mkB T
N
ln
=
2
A
2~
1z
2
2
kB T
~c
g3 (z)
P
where n = N/V , and gn (z) = =1 n . The function g3 (z) is finite at z = 1,
d
d
but has an infinite second derivative. We can see by noting that z dz
z dz
g3 (z) =
g1 (z) diverges at z = 1. Thus n is finite at z = 1, but cannot be continued
91
beyond z = 1. There is Bose-Einstein condensation to the zero-momentum state
when n exceeds the critical density
nc =
2
2
kB T
~c
g3 (1)
2 n
2g3 (1)
1/3
92
CHAPTER 18.
Chapter 19
19.1
Z
Z
eikr cos
1
eikr eikr
=
dkk 2
3
2
2
k + 2r0
4 ir 0
k + 2r0
(2) 0
1
Z
ikr
exp r 2r0
1
e
1 exp r 2r0
= 2
dk
=
=
4 r r k2 + 2r0
4r r
4r
2r0
m(x) =
dkk 2 2
d(cos )
The dk integration was carried out over a contour in the complex plane.
19.2
(a)
Minimize E(, ) with respect to :
E
= 2c + g 2
g2
=
2c
0 =
(b)
Ee () = (at g) 2 + b 4
2
b = b g
4c
(c)
Minimize Ee () with respect to :
i
h
Ee
= 2 (at g) + 4b 2
(
0
(t > g/a)
q
=
(g at) /2b (t < g/a)
0 =
93
94
CHAPTER 19.
T<T0
T=T0
T>T0
T>>T0
(b)
We see from the sketch above that the conditions for E(S) to be at a
minimum are
(i) E/S = 0,
(ii) E 0,
(iii) S 0.
The first leads to the condition
S
S
= 0
!
r
32cat
3b
1 1
=
8c
9b2
r
3b
32cat
S =
1+ 1
8c
9b2
95
< 0. Otherwise S = 0.
if 32cat < 9b2 and E(S)
(c)
We note that at T = Tc we have E/S = 0 and E = 0. Excluding the
trivial root, we can write these two conditions as
2at + 3bS + 4cS 2
at + bS + cS 2
= 0
= 0
Multiplying the second equation by 4 and subtracting it from the first, we find
bS = 2at. Substittuting this into the second equation gives t = b2 /4ac, or
Tc = T0 +
b2
4ac
(d)
When the temperature is increase from below to T = Tc , or t = b2 /4ac, we
have
b
S =
2c
= 0. When T is further decreased it jumps to S = 0, where E = 0.
and E(S)
Thus the transition is first-order. This is illustrated in the accompanying sketch.
E
T<Tc
S
S
First-order
transition
T=Tc
T>Tc
E
= aS 2
T
(It was unthoughtful of us to have used the symbol S for the order parameter!)
Thus, the latent heat is
2
b
b2
2
L = aTc S = a T0 +
4ac
2c
(e)
96
CHAPTER 19.
b = b + c cos4 + sin4
E
= 2at + 4b2
2
= at
2b
2 2
) = E0 a t
E(,
2b
0 =
c = 0 : irrelevant.
= b |c|
s
a|t|
2 b |c|
bmin
= b
r
a|t|
2b
c > 0 : = /4.
c
= b+
s 2
a|t|
=
2b + c
bmin
In all cases, the critical exponent for the order parameter is = 1/2.
(c)
To find the susceptibility, we turn on an infinitesimally small external field
h = (h1 , h2 ), so that
E = E0 + at 21 + 22 + b 21 + 22 |c| 41 + 42 h1 1 h2 2
97
First consider the case h = (h1 , 0).We can take =(1 , 0). The condition
E/1 = 0 gives
2at1 + 4 (b |c|) 31 h1 = 0
Dierentiating with respect to h1 yields the longitudinal susceptibility:
1 =
1
1
1
=
2 = 3at
h1
2at + 12 (b |c|) 1
1
y
h2
=
h2
16|c|3
1
|c| b 1
=
=
2 = 16a|c| t
h2
h2
16|c|
98
CHAPTER 19.
Chapter 20
20.1
The wave-number dierence between the condensates is given by k1 k2 =
2
3
,
cm.
where is the deBroglie wavelength. From the data we have /2 =1.510
The relative velocity is thus given by
~
(k1 k2 ) = 0.05 cm/s
m
.
20.2
2
From (20.16) || = g 1 12 m 2 r2 . With (20.11), we put = gn0 ,
where n0 = N0 /V . Thus
r2
2
|| = n0 1
16an0 r04
~
1 1 2
x2 =
ax ax +
ax + a2
x
m
2 2
and similarly for y and z.The last two terms have no diagonal elements. Therefore
~
3
hn|x2 + y 2 + z 2 |ni =
nx + ny + nz +
m
2
(b)
99
100
CHAPTER 20.
We know that
2
p
m 2 r2
n = En
n
+
2m
2
1
m 2
hn|r2 |ni = En
2
2
Subtracting the two equations yields the desired result.
(c)
In the N -boson system, the probability of finding a boson in state n is given
by the fraction of particles in that state:
P (n) =
1
1
N z 1 exp (En /kT ) 1
Therefore
X
r02 X nx + ny + nz + 32
2
hri =
hn|r |niP (n) =
N n z 1 exp (En /kT ) 1
n
2
20.4
Estimate the transition temperature T0 by putting the chemical potential
equal to the zero-point energy: = 32 ~. Thus
N
kT0
~
3 Z
1
exp (~ (nx + ny + nz ) /kT0 ) 1
dxdydz
and we obtain
1
exp (x + y + z) 1
kT0
= bN 1/3
~
where b is given by
b3 =
dxdydz
1
exp (x + y + z) 1
20.5
(a)
In the semiclassical approximation
3
dnx dny dnz exp ~ nx + ny + nz +
2
0
3
= z (~)3 exp ~
2
101
Thus
3
z N (~) exp
3
~
2
T0
bT
exp
3
~
2
hri
r02
3
dnx dny dnz nx + ny + nz +
2
3
exp ~ nx + ny + nz +
2
3
z
3
4
3
=
exp ~ 3 (~) + (~)
N
2
2
z
N
= 3b
2
r0
~
T
T0
N 1/3
(c)
According to (b), hri2 is a linear function of T . However, the formula becomes invalid below T T0 , where a condensate begins to form. The condensate wave function is that for nx = ny = 0, and occupies a central region in
the harmonic potential of radius r0 . Thus below T0 the linear plot flattens to a
constant value r02 . (See sketch)
<r 2 >
r 02
T
T0
102
CHAPTER 20.
Chapter 21
21.1
The equation for the magnetic field is the same as that for the vector potential:
B(x) = 0
x2
where = 0 outside the medium (x < 0), and = 16e2 n/mc2 inside (x > 0).
Since B = B0 outside, and B(x) must be continuous, the solution inside is
B(x) = B0 exp x
(x > 0)
The penetration depth is 1/2 .
21.2
(a)
From Ohms law U0 V = IR. Thus
U0
~ d
= I0 R sin
2e dt
(b)
~ d
= U0 (1 sin )
2e dt
The left side is the voltage. When it approaches zero, we must have sin = 1 .
This is possible if > 1. Thus there is a nonzero current I = 1 I0 .
103