We can now return to the problem at hand, namely that we have a collection
of
number of classical particles, thought of as hard spheres of radius ,
having mass ,
and at temperature .
We would like to derive all the thermodynamic properties of the object in
question starting from Newtonian mechanics. For the sake of concreteness,
let us consider an ideal gas at temperature ,
confined in a container of volume ,
and let us further suppose that the gas is in equilibrium. By the gas
being ideal, we mean that all the interactions of the particles which
compose the gas can be ignored. The energy of the gas hence consists
entirely of kinetic energy; let the three-dimensional velocity of the -th
particle be denoted by
.
Since there are
particles, the total kinetic energy of the gas is simply the sum of the
kinetic energies of the individual particles (atoms). Hence the energy of
the gas is given by the following
 |
(10.2) |
Recall that by equilibrium we mean that the
gas has attained a state of maximum entropy, or equivalently, that there
are no more changes of temperature and other state variable taking place.
By the statement that the gas is at temperature ,
we mean that the gas in question is in contact with a heat bath which is
at a temperature .
The very fact that we have introduced the physical idea of temperature
already implies that the gas is not an isolated system, but rather is part
of a larger system which includes the heat bath and the object at a given
temperature.
Figure
10.2: Gas in contact with a heat bath
 |
How do we describe a gas, shown in Figure
10.2, composed out of
particles, occupying a volume
and at temperature ?
There are simply too many particles to keep track of. To provide a
mechanical description of the gas, we need to know the exact position and
velocity of each and every particle, and which in general, is called a
microstate of the system. A description of the microstate of any large
object, containing about Avogardo's number of atoms, is in practice too
difficult. And even more importantly, there is no need since the
questions asked in thermodynamics do not refer to any single atom
composing the gas, but rather, refer to the properties of the gas taken as
a whole, called the bulk properties of the gas. We now make a major
conceptual leap. We postulate that having a gas at a temperature
means that the gas is not in a definite (mechanical) microstate
state. Instead, all the various (mechanical) microstates states of
the gas are now taken to occur with a certain probability. Hence, the
description of the gas by its microstates, that is, by the detailed
knowledge of the position and momentum of each and every atom of the gas,
is replaced by an ensemble of microstates. An ensemble is a collection
of all the possible microstates of the gas. The ensemble is called
a microcanonical, canonical or grand canonical depending on the way that
probabilities are assigned for the occurrence of the various microstate .
We will return to this question is some detail in Section. Since we know
nothing of the microstates of the gas, the most consistent manner of
assigning a probability of occurrence for the various allowed microstates
is to assume that all the microstates of the gas are equally
likely; this is how a microcanonical ensemble is defined. Our ignorance of
the microstates is consequently given a complete expression in the
microcanonical ensemble which is defined as follows. Given the parameters
such as energy, volume and so on that specify the macroscopic properties
of the gas, in the microcanonical ensemble all the microstates of the
gas are equally likely. One should note that the idea of ensemble
reflects our ignorance as to what is the microstate of the gas. The
gas is inherently not in a probabilistic state, but rather it is our
inability to determine its state which has led us to the ideas of
probability, and to the idea of classical uncertainty. In quantum
mechanics we will encounter uncertainty which is not a function of our
ignorance, but rather, is an intrinsic property of nature. In the language
of probability theory, the positions
and velocities
are all considered to be continuous random variables. In other
words, the velocity of the particle has no definite value, but rather, its
probability of occurrence is determined by the ensemble that describes it.
We will denote by brackets the average value of a random variable. Hence,
the average value of the kinetic energy of the th
particle is denoted by
.
In Section 4 we will examine more closely how to calculate the average
value of various physical quantities including kinetic energy. |